If your Westlake Village commercial HVAC is down, you need a licensed contractor who understands the area's hillside access and small-business needs. LC Heating & Air handles commercial split systems, rooftop units, and mini splits for retail, offices, and restaurants. We provide written estimates, pull permits, and prioritize keeping your business running.
Commercial HVAC Repair & Service in Westlake Village
LC Heating & Air provides commercial HVAC in Westlake Village — including commercial HVAC repair, commercial air conditioning, rooftop unit repair, commercial HVAC maintenance. Whether you need same-day service, a written estimate, or help deciding between repair and replacement, our licensed technicians handle every make and model.
We repair and service all major HVAC brands in Westlake Village, including Carrier, Trane, Lennox, York, and Goodman, and older or discontinued units. No matter the manufacturer, we diagnose the problem accurately and give you an upfront price before any work begins.
Westlake Village is an affluent master-planned city straddling the Los Angeles and Ventura county line. Its commercial properties range from small retail storefronts and medical offices to restaurants and mixed-use buildings tucked into hillside lots and canyon settings. When the HVAC fails in one of these spaces, it isn't just uncomfortable—it affects customers, employees, and sometimes food safety or compliance. I'm Leo, and my team at LC Heating & Air has been handling commercial HVAC in Westlake Village since we opened in 2020. I've been in the trade for over 20 years, and I know that commercial calls here come with their own set of challenges.
This page covers what Westlake Village commercial property owners should expect from our service: how we diagnose problems, when repair makes sense versus replacement, what costs and rebates matter, and how we handle access and scheduling on hillside commercial lots. No fluff, just practical information.
Consideraciones HVAC locales
Narrow driveways and slope issues require pre-site planning for equipment delivery and ladder access.
Salt air and wind accelerate corrosion on RTUs and condensers; routine maintenance is critical.
Retail, office, and restaurant spaces may share a single system or have separate needs—each requires individual assessment.
Common Commercial HVAC Problems in Westlake Village
Westlake Village's hillside and canyon locations mean commercial HVAC equipment often sits on rooftops with limited access or in tight mechanical rooms. Sun exposure can be intense, and coastal winds carry salt and moisture that accelerate corrosion on rooftop units (RTUs) and condenser coils. We regularly see failed run capacitors, refrigerant leaks, and clogged condenser coils in this area, especially on units that don't get regular maintenance.
For restaurants, the additional strain of makeup air systems for kitchen exhaust hoods and grease buildup on rooftop units creates earlier failure patterns. Office buildings with zoned controls often struggle with room-by-room comfort differences because of slope, sun exposure, and long duct runs. These aren't design flaws—they're the reality of the local climate and terrain, and we account for them in every service call.
Westlake Village's Commercial Building Stock
Westlake Village's commercial properties include small retail spaces, professional offices, medical offices, restaurants, and mixed-use buildings. Many are older custom-built structures with aging equipment that may be undersized for current loads or operating on phased-out refrigerants like R-22. Newer tenant improvements often include modern split systems or ductless mini splits, but retrofits bring their own issues with line-set routing through finished spaces and roof penetrations that must hold up to coastal weather.
The hillside terrain means many commercial mechanical areas are tight—ladder access to rooftops may be over slopes, and condenser placement requires planning for airflow clearance and line-set runs. We've worked in everything from a small restaurant on Thousand Oaks Boulevard to a medical office tucked into a canyon lot. Each property needs a site-specific approach, not a cookie-cutter solution.
How We Diagnose Commercial HVAC Issues
When we arrive at a Westlake Village commercial property, the first step is listening. We ask about the symptoms: which zones are uncomfortable, when the problem started, whether the system is running continuously or short-cycling, and what maintenance history exists. Then we check the equipment—start with the run capacitor, measure amp draw on the compressor and fan motor, inspect the evaporator coil and condenser coil for dirt or damage, and check refrigerant pressures and temperatures. For rooftop units, we also verify the economizer operation and check for combustion issues on gas heat sections.
For restaurants, we pay close attention to makeup air systems and grease buildup. For office buildings, we check thermostat and zoning controls. We never diagnose over the phone—we need eyes on the equipment and system readings to give an honest assessment. That process takes 30 minutes to an hour for most commercial systems, and we provide a written estimate before any repair or replacement work begins.
Commercial Repair vs. Replacement: Honest Guidance
Here is the truth: not every commercial HVAC problem needs a new system. If the compressor fails on a 5-year-old RTU, a repair makes sense. If the same compressor fails on a 15-year-old unit with a known refrigerant leak, a replacement is probably the better financial decision. We look at the equipment age, condition of the evaporator and condenser coils, refrigerant type (R-22 vs. R-410A vs. newer low-GWP options), compressor access, and total repair cost relative to new unit pricing.
We also consider the property's business needs. A restaurant that loses a walk-in cooler or dining room AC in July needs a fast, reliable fix—sometimes a temporary repair to get through the weekend, then a replacement later. For offices, planned replacement during a slow season might be better than emergency repair. We lay out both options with clear cost comparisons and let you make the call. If the system is worth repairing, we'll tell you. If the pattern points to replacement, we'll explain why.
Commercial HVAC Costs and Rebates in Westlake Village
Commercial diagnostic fees in Westlake Village typically range from $175 to $350, depending on equipment type and access. Repairs usually land between $250 and $2,500—a capacitor swap is on the low end, while a compressor replacement on an RTU can hit the upper range. New installations vary widely based on tonnage, efficiency, and site complexity, so we quote each job individually. We provide written estimates on all commercial work.
Rebates and incentives for commercial HVAC upgrades are available through Southern California Gas Company (SoCalGas) and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP), but amounts change regularly. There are no federal tax credits for commercial HVAC replacements. We can point you to current rebate programs, but we do not guarantee specific savings amounts. Energy-efficient equipment tends to pay back over time in lower utility bills—especially in Westlake Village's climate where AC runs hard in summer.
Access and Scheduling for Westlake Village Commercial Sites
Hillside commercial properties often have tight access—narrow driveways, stairs instead of ladders to rooftops, or equipment tucked into mechanical closets with limited clearance. We plan for these conditions before the truck rolls: we confirm roof access points, line-set routing paths, and any coordination needed with property managers or tenants. For restaurants, we coordinate with the kitchen schedule to minimize downtime during service hours.
We offer same-day service options when possible, and commercial emergency calls get priority scheduling. During business hours, our target response for commercial emergencies is 2–4 hours. For after-hours emergencies, we aim to respond within 2 hours. All emergency calls are answered within 30 minutes by a live person. We work around your business hours to minimize disruption.
Common Mistakes with Commercial HVAC Service
One mistake we see is property owners skipping regular maintenance. A commercial RTU that never gets a coil cleaning or filter change will lose capacity and eventually fail—often during a heat wave when you need it most. Another is assuming a residential HVAC contractor can handle commercial work. Commercial equipment requires different knowledge of controls, refrigeration circuits, and building codes—including Title 24 compliance and EPA refrigerant handling rules.
Some businesses also try to save money by patching R-22 systems with used parts or unauthorized refrigerants. That approach eventually costs more in failed compressors and lost business. We recommend honest condition assessments and either proper repair or planned replacement, not band-aids that leave you stranded.
Health and Safety Considerations for Commercial HVAC
Commercial HVAC affects more than comfort. For restaurants, proper ventilation and makeup air systems are critical to kitchen safety—they remove smoke, grease, and combustion byproducts while maintaining negative pressure relative to dining areas. For medical offices, temperature and humidity control affect patient comfort and equipment operation. Poor maintenance can lead to mold in ductwork, carbon monoxide leaks from gas heat sections, or refrigerant leaks that require evacuation and proper recovery.
All our technicians are EPA-certified for refrigerant handling per Section 608. We pull LADBS or city permits for commercial replacement work, which includes safety inspections. We follow California Air Resources Board (CARB) regulations on low-GWP refrigerants for new equipment. Your safety and the safety of your employees and customers are on the line—that's why we take code compliance and proper installation seriously.
Commercial HVAC Decision Guide for Westlake Village
If your commercial system is less than 10 years old, has a single component failure (like a capacitor or contactor), and has a clean maintenance history, repair is usually the right move. If the system is older than 12-15 years, leaks refrigerant, or has a failed compressor, replacement should be on the table. We can help you compare the costs and benefits.
Here's what we recommend: schedule a diagnostic visit ($175–$350) so we can document the system condition, check refrigerant charge and airflow, and give you a written estimate. That investment buys you a clear picture and an honest recommendation. We don't pressure you into a decision—we give you the facts and let you decide what fits your business.
Cómo funciona la visita
We assess your commercial HVAC system, document current equipment, identify issues, and develop a service scope.
We provide a detailed written proposal including equipment, labor, permit costs, and timeline.
Permitted installation or repair completed with minimal disruption to business operations.
Written completion documentation, permit sign-off, and maintenance records provided.
Factores de costo que revisamos antes de cotizar
- • Equipment tonnage — larger systems cost more to repair or replace
- • Access difficulty — rooftop or hillside access may add labor time
- • Refrigerant type — R-22 systems may need conversion or replacement
- • Permits and inspections — required for all commercial HVAC replacements
- • Brand and efficiency level — higher SEER units have higher upfront cost but lower operating costs
Próximos pasos útiles
Commercial HVAC in Westlake Village at a glance
- • LC Heating & Air is a licensed C-20 HVAC contractor (CSLB #1073586) serving Westlake Village and all of LA County.
- • Owner Leo has 20+ years hands-on HVAC experience; company founded 2020.
- • Phone: (323) 970-3113 — emergency calls answered within 30 minutes.
- • Commercial HVAC service area covers all Los Angeles County including Westlake Village.
- • Specialize in small to mid-size commercial: 2-20 ton RTUs, split systems, mini splits, and heat pumps.
- • Written estimates provided on all commercial work; permits pulled for replacements.
- • Commercial maintenance contracts available with quarterly or semi-annual visits and documented service records.
Our commercial hvac process in Westlake Village
Reviewed by Leo, Owner & Lead Technician
This commercial hvac guide for Westlake Village is reviewed for practical HVAC accuracy by Leo at LC Heating & Air. LC Heating & Air holds California CSLB C-20 HVAC license #1073586 and provides written estimates before approved work.
What Westlake Village customers say about commercial hvac
Verified reviews from homeowners in Westlake Village and nearby neighborhoods who used our commercial hvac service.
“Our AC stopped working during a heat wave and LC had a technician here within two hours. He diagnosed a bad capacitor, had the part on his truck, and fixed it on the spot. Fair price, no upsell. Will use again.”
“Our furnace wasn't heating evenly upstairs. LC found that half of our ductwork in the attic had separated and was blowing hot air into the attic. Repaired everything and now every room heats equally. Professional and transparent.”





