Denver Geothermal
4.6(60+ Reviews) *

Groundwater Open Loop Installation in Englewood, Arapahoe County

A functioning open-loop system using your well, with heat exchanger tie-in, compact filtration, and a clear discharge plan.

  • On-site Water Quality Testing
  • Well Pump Integration & Controls
  • Designed For Compact Urban Lots
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What We Do

Open loop installation that helps Home Owners set up reliable groundwater heating

Includes well pump integration, filtration and water-treatment components, discharge routing, and heat exchanger connections.

  • Well Pump Integration & Filtration

    Integrate well pump, install filtration, and configure flow controls for stable open-loop operation.

  • Discharge & Heat Exchanger Connection

    Route discharge, connect to the heat exchanger, and verify compliant flow and exchanger performance.

Why Denver Geothermal

Site-specific loop design and written estimates

Incorrect loop choice or poor filtration planning leads to permit delays, pump failures, and higher lifecycle costs without clear documentation.

Common Challenges

  • Shallow utilities limit horizontal loop options

    Urban fill and shallow utilities in Englewood often prevent horizontal loops, increasing access planning and the need for alternative layouts.

  • Water-quality and filtration maintenance concerns

    Well water with high solids or mineral content can foul heat exchangers and increase pump maintenance if filtration is not specified correctly.

  • Discharge permitting and regulatory restrictions

    Discharge routing and local permitting can block system approval; incomplete plans risk delays, retrofit work, or enforcement actions.

How We Help

  • Flow controls sized for 2–6 GPM per ton

    We size flow controls and pump integration to maintain 2–6 GPM per ton, protecting heat exchangers and preserving expected performance.

  • Site-specific filtration and media selection

    Custom filtration systems and media choices prevent fouling, extend exchanger life, and reduce routine maintenance visits.

  • Written permitting and discharge plans

    We provide permit-ready discharge routing and documentation to shorten approval timelines and reduce compliance risk.

  • Options for tight urban lots

    When horizontal runs are constrained, we evaluate vertical bore or compact open-loop placements to limit yard damage and preserve utilities.

  • Commissioning and performance verification

    Post-install commissioning checks verify flow rates, delta-T, and pump operation to confirm the system meets design targets.

Property owners and managers planning open loop solutions
Property owners and managers planning open loop solutions

Who We Help

Property owners and managers planning open loop solutions

  • Home Owners With Englewood bungalows

    Owners of Englewood bungalows and compact lots with existing wells who want lower energy bills and minimal yard disruption during tie-in.

  • Property Developers & Builders Integrating Loops

    Developers planning infill or renovation projects who need itemized loop options, shallow-utility coordination, and clear scope documents.

  • Commercial Property Managers In Dense Corridors

    Managers near Broadway and the medical district seeking predictable HVAC costs, low-maintenance open-loop choices, and scheduled service plans.

How We Work

How open loop installation works

We assess site suitability, define filtration and discharge needs, and complete installation with commissioning checks.

  1. Site assessment

    We inspect the well, measure available flow, review soil and shallow utilities, and report on open-loop feasibility and layout options.

  2. Design & permitting

    We size pumps and flow controls, specify filtration and discharge routing, and prepare permit-ready documentation to meet local requirements.

  3. Installation & commissioning

    Coordinate pump tie-in, filtration installation, and heat exchanger connections, then run commissioning checks for flow, delta-T, and operation.

About This Service

About this Service

Open loop geothermal uses groundwater from an existing well as the working fluid for a heat pump. In Englewood this option applies mainly to compact urban lots that already have wells or to renovation projects where avoiding horizontal excavation is a priority. It reduces yard disturbance when a compliant discharge path exists.

Urban fill soils and shallow utilities in Englewood make horizontal loops difficult, and tight lot lines limit staging space for drilling and filtration equipment. An on-site flow test is mandatory to verify the well’s GPM and static levels. Water-quality testing should focus on urban contaminants, turbidity, and chloride concentration that can affect heat-exchanger materials. Because of the dense neighborhood fabric, discharge routing and permitting often require additional coordination with municipal authorities to meet stormwater or sewer connection rules. Expect limited work windows to reduce neighborhood disruption.

Operational requirements typically include compact filtration systems, scheduled filter servicing, and more frequent inspections due to urban water-quality variability. If a well cannot sustain required flow or if discharge is not permitted, a closed-loop retrofit or small vertical bore field is usually the alternative. The service includes site evaluation, utility-locate coordination, water-quality and flow testing, and a commissioning checklist that outlines maintenance tasks and inspection intervals.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about open loop installations

Answers on water quality, permitting, and installing on compact urban lots.

Poor filtration lets solids and scale build in the heat exchanger, reducing efficiency and causing premature pump or exchanger failure. Fixing fouled exchangers or failed pumps usually means lengthy downtime and higher repair costs than timely filtration upgrades.
Delaying permits can result in enforcement actions, retrofit orders, or forced system shutdowns. Securing discharge approval before commissioning avoids costly rework and interruption to system operation.
Yes. Englewood-area projects typically require documentation for discharge routing to satisfy local water authorities; we prepare permit-ready plans and assist with submissions.
Open loop tie-in usually needs less excavation than long horizontal loops, but well access and pump work cause short-term yard disruption. We plan work to limit disturbance and restore affected areas.
Shallow utilities can limit horizontal options. If well capacity and water quality are acceptable, an open-loop tie-in or vertical alternatives can be viable after a site assessment.
Maintenance depends on water quality; many systems need cartridge or media checks every 6–12 months. We document recommended intervals and include them in the commissioning checklist.
About Denver Geothermal

Who We Are

About Denver Geothermal

If rising energy bills or an aging HVAC drain your budget, we help Denver homeowners and businesses plan and arrange geothermal heat pump installations. We assess site suitability, recommend horizontal, vertical, pond, or open loop options, and provide clear, itemized cost estimates before work begins.

Our Full Story

Our Mission & Values

We exist to make Geothermal Heat Pumps adoption straightforward for Denver homeowners and businesses by guiding site evaluation, loop design, and coordinating local installation and service.

  1. Site Assessments

    On-site or remote soil and spacing evaluation for loop design

  2. Transparent Estimates

    Itemized quotes covering loops, unit, and commissioning

  3. Scheduled Follow-up

    Post-install commissioning and annual maintenance reminders

Reviews Disclosure

Our vetted partners maintain more than 60 reviews with an average rating of 4.6 stars.