Commercial HVAC repair for Greenville business properties.

This page is for buildings with poor cooling, heating issues, weak airflow, uneven temperatures, or equipment that is not working the way it should.

Most repair requests start because something feels off in the building.

Cooling problems

Loss of cooling, uneven temperatures, weak airflow, or rooms that do not stay comfortable during occupied hours.

Heating problems

Parts of the property that are not warming evenly or are harder to keep comfortable during colder weather.

Air movement issues

Problem rooms, uneven distribution, ventilation concerns, or larger spaces that are harder to balance.

Equipment concerns

Units that are underperforming, cycling oddly, shutting down, or no longer keeping up with building demand.

The problem can show up differently depending on the property.

Office buildings

Comfort complaints, occupied zones, and shared systems can make repair issues more noticeable fast.

Retail and restaurant spaces

Customer-facing spaces usually feel HVAC problems quickly, especially during busy hours and warmer weather.

Warehouses and flex spaces

Larger footprints and uneven loads can make airflow and temperature swings harder to ignore.

Industrial environments

Repair issues may involve larger systems, tougher site conditions, or equipment that is more specialized.

Commercial repair problems often show up around a few familiar system types.

Rooftop units

Often tied to cooling loss, weak airflow, or sections of the building that stop keeping up during occupied hours.

Package and split systems

These requests can involve poor heating, weak cooling, or areas that feel noticeably different from the rest of the property.

Controls and thermostats

Sometimes the problem looks mechanical at first, but starts with control settings, zone response, or communication between components.

Ventilation and make-up air

Air movement complaints in restaurants, warehouses, and larger commercial spaces may point to more than basic cooling trouble.

Repair requests are centered on Greenville and nearby business areas.

Greenville is the primary focus, with nearby areas such as Greer, Mauldin, Simpsonville, Travelers Rest, and Fountain Inn also relevant to the page.

What helps make a repair request easier to understand.

What should I include?

Describe what the system is doing, which areas are affected, and whether the issue seems tied to one unit, several units, or a larger part of the property.

What if the equipment type is unknown?

That is fine. A plain-language note about poor cooling, weak airflow, shutoffs, or uneven temperatures is still useful.

What if the issue keeps coming back?

Include that in the request. Repeat issues can matter when deciding whether the next step is repair, maintenance, or a larger equipment change.

Can the request involve tenant or customer areas?

Yes. If the issue affects office suites, sales floors, dining rooms, or other occupied zones, include that context.

Describe the property, the issue, and what the equipment is doing.

It helps to include the property type, location, and a short description of what is going wrong.