Lafayette sits in Boulder County at around 5,200 feet, where chinook winds can flip temperatures by 40 degrees in a single afternoon and overnight lows in January regularly dip well below freezing. That kind of weather puts real demand on residential heating systems, and boilers that are starting to wear will often show it in ways that are easy to miss if you are not paying attention. If one or more of these sounds familiar, it is worth getting a professional set of eyes on the system before Boulder County’s next cold snap decides the matter for you.
Lafayette’s character comes partly from its age. Old Town Lafayette and surrounding blocks are home to bungalows and ranch-style houses built anywhere from the 1940s through the 1970s, many of which are still running their original or once-replaced boiler systems. Newer development along the US-287 corridor has added more modern homes to the mix, but the older core of the city is where we encounter the most complex and long-neglected heating situations. Boulder County’s hard water compounds the problem by accelerating mineral buildup inside heat exchangers and pipes over time.
Experience working in older homes with aging systems is not something you can fake. Our technicians have spent years in exactly these situations and know where to look first.
Older homes deserve more than a quick fix that delays the real problem by a season. When Simply Mechanical comes out for a boiler repair in Lafayette, the job starts with a complete system assessment, not just a look at the one component the homeowner noticed. That approach consistently turns up issues that would have caused a second service call if we had only addressed the obvious symptom.
Every recommendation comes with a clear explanation and a firm price. You decide what gets done, and we do it right the first time.
When Renee called us in mid-January, she had been dealing with a cold back bedroom for two full heating seasons. Her home in Old Town Lafayette was a 1950s ranch that had been updated in most ways, but the boiler and the baseboard system feeding the rear of the house had never been touched. She had been using a space heater in the back room and had just accepted it as a quirk of an older house.
Our technician traced the issue to a combination of two things. The circulator pump serving the rear zone was moving water, but barely, and the baseboard unit in that room had a section completely blocked with sediment. We flushed the baseboard, serviced the pump, and balanced the system so flow was distributed evenly. By the time we wrapped up, the back bedroom was reaching temperature for the first time in years. Renee said she wished she had called two winters earlier. That is something we hear more often than we should, and it is exactly why we encourage people not to wait.
Lafayette is a community with a strong sense of place and a lot of pride in its older homes and established neighborhoods. The people who live here are not looking for the cheapest option. They are looking for someone they can trust to do the job well and be straight with them about what they find. That is the exact standard we hold ourselves to on every call.
Lafayette homeowners have trusted us with their heating systems for years, and we take that trust seriously every single time we pull into a driveway.
Yes, and it is something we handle regularly in Lafayette’s older neighborhoods. Systems that have gone without maintenance for a long time often have multiple issues, and we will walk you through everything we find so you can decide how to proceed. We never pressure anyone into repairs they are not comfortable with.
Hard water leaves mineral deposits inside the heat exchanger and pipes over time, which reduces efficiency and can eventually cause overheating or blockages. A system flush and descaling treatment can clear the buildup and restore normal performance. Regular maintenance helps prevent it from accumulating to a damaging level.
That depends on the condition of the system and the nature of the repair. A boiler in otherwise good shape with a straightforward fix can continue running reliably for years. We will give you an honest breakdown of the repair cost versus what a replacement would involve so you can make the decision that makes the most sense for your home.
Uneven heating in a hydronic system is usually a flow problem. It could be a zone valve not opening fully, a circulator pump losing capacity, a blocked baseboard section, or an air pocket trapped in the line. A technician can isolate the cause and restore even heat throughout the home.
Do not ignore it. A sulfur or rotten egg smell could indicate a gas issue, while a burning or metallic odor might point to an electrical or mechanical problem. Turn the system off, ventilate the area if needed, and call for service right away. If you suspect a gas leak, leave the home and contact your utility provider before calling us.
Baseboards are part of the same hydronic loop as the boiler, so problems in one affect the other. A baseboard unit that stays cold, makes noise, or leaks is often a sign of a flow restriction, air pocket, or sediment blockage in that section of the system rather than a failure in the baseboard itself. Our technician evaluates the full loop during a boiler repair visit, not just the unit.