Birkenhead's steep terrain and harbour-facing hillside homes present installation challenges that a standard remote assessment cannot identify. Outdoor unit placement on sloped sections, system sizing for shaded bush-set properties, and access to upper-storey indoor units all require a physical on-site evaluation. We provide a fixed-price quote that accounts for the specific structural and environmental variables of your property.
Local knowledge: Birkenhead's steep sections mean the outdoor unit often cannot be placed on a ground pad. Wall-bracket mounting is the standard approach here, positioning the unit cleanly on the exterior wall. We identify the right location at the site visit to avoid noise issues and ensure the unit stays accessible for any future maintenance.
Two things set Birkenhead installs apart from a flat suburban job: where to put the outdoor unit on a steep site, and how to size the system correctly for a home that does not get full sun.
On steep Birkenhead sections where a ground pad is not feasible, the outdoor unit is mounted on a wall bracket or pole attached to the building exterior. We identify the optimal position at assessment to keep the unit off the ground, ensure adequate airflow, avoid noise issues for neighbouring properties, and maintain access for any future servicing.
Birkenhead's bush-set homes with significant tree cover and north-facing hill aspects heat more slowly than open suburban properties. A system sized purely on floor area will underperform in these conditions. We factor the shade pattern and aspect into the heat load calculation to ensure the unit can reach and hold the set temperature in the coldest part of the day.
On split-level or multi-storey homes built into Birkenhead's hillside, the indoor unit position may require scaffolding or elevated access equipment. We identify this at the assessment and factor any additional access cost into the fixed price before you commit. There are no surprises added on the day.
The 1960s-80s weatherboard homes that dominate Birkenhead's residential streets are generally straightforward to drill for refrigerant line penetration. Ceiling cavities in this era are typically accessible. The steep section challenges are usually about outdoor unit placement and sizing, not the wall penetration itself.
The Chelsea Sugar Refinery end of the suburb and the bush-set hillside streets each have their own install characteristics. Here is what we look for.
The most common Birkenhead-specific challenge. On sections where the ground drops away steeply, a standard outdoor unit ground pad is not an option. Wall-bracket or pole mounting is the solution. We choose the position to balance airflow requirements, noise minimisation, and practical access for the life of the unit.
A home surrounded by established bush and large trees on a north-facing hillside will have a higher heating load per square metre than the same-sized home on an open flat section. We add a shade and aspect factor to the heat load calculation for these properties. An undersized system running constantly is more expensive to operate and wears faster.
Many Birkenhead homes are split-level or terraced into the hillside. The preferred indoor unit position may be on a wall that requires elevated access or scaffold. We identify this upfront and include any access cost in the fixed price. The last thing you want is an additional charge appearing on install day.
Birkenhead has a high proportion of owner-occupiers who have lived in their homes for ten or more years. These are not first-time buyers looking for the cheapest option. They want a system sized correctly, installed by someone who understands the property, and backed by a guarantee they can rely on.
Steep sections and shaded properties need more than a standard quote. Here is what we do differently.
A shaded north-facing hillside home needs a larger system than the same floor area on a flat sunny section. We factor in shade pattern, aspect, and ceiling height before recommending a system size. An undersized unit in a low-solar-gain home will never keep up.
We visit the property and walk the section before quoting. The outdoor unit position on a steep Birkenhead site is not something you can determine from a photo. We identify the right position at assessment so the quote reflects the actual installation requirements.
If scaffolding or elevated access is needed for an upper-storey indoor unit position, that cost is identified at assessment and included in the quote. You are not surprised by additional charges on install day.
Every install is backed by a 12-month workmanship guarantee. If anything we installed is not performing correctly, we come back and sort it. This is on top of the manufacturer warranty on the unit itself.
Steep section properties need a thorough site assessment before anything is quoted. Here is the process.
We visit, walk the section, check ceiling cavity access, assess the switchboard, and identify the outdoor unit position and any access requirements for upper-storey units.
Free, no obligationYou receive a written quote covering supply, installation, wall-bracket mounting where required, any access equipment, electrical work, and Certificate of Compliance.
Within 48 hoursWe work cleanly and protect your floors and surfaces. Standard high-wall installs take 4 to 6 hours. Jobs requiring elevated access or bracket mounting take longer and are scoped at assessment.
4 to 7 hoursThe system is commissioned and tested. We walk you through the controls. Your registered electrician issues the Certificate of Compliance on the same day.
Same dayEach nearby suburb has its own housing characteristics and install requirements.
See the full list of service areas across the North Shore, or visit the Takapuna installation page for general information. Return to the Takapuna Heat Pumps homepage.
We assess the section, size the system for your specific conditions, and give you a price that covers everything including access and mounting. No surprises on install day.