The owner of a courtyard-style home in Alys Beach wanted to retire an aging gas furnace plus AC combo and consolidate to a single high-efficiency heat pump. The complication wasn't the engineering — it was the community's design review process. Alys Beach's architectural standards are specific about exterior equipment: nothing visible from primary view corridors, no obstruction of the white masonry walls that define the streetscape, and absolutely no rooftop placement on the front-facing roof planes.
We submitted the equipment specification, a site plan with the proposed condenser location screened by the existing service yard wall, and a noise rating sheet showing the variable-speed condenser running quieter than the home's pool pump. Approval came back in five working days with one minor adjustment to the platform height.
The install itself was four days. We replaced the original air handler with a matched variable-speed indoor unit, installed the new heat pump on the screened pad, ran the line set through the existing chase to avoid any new exterior penetrations on the public-facing elevation, and commissioned the system with the homeowner's smart thermostat. The old equipment was hauled out the alley-side service entrance — no front-of-house traffic during the swap.
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Design-conscious neighborhoods deserve design-conscious work. Our heat pump installation service regularly navigates HOA design standards across the 30A communities — Alys Beach, Rosemary Beach, WaterColor, and Watersound each have their own process, and the right placement choices up front prevent both review delays and resale-time complications.