Denver Geothermal
4.6(60+ Reviews) *

Well-Source Open Loop Installation in Golden, Jefferson County

Heat and cool your home with well water, lower energy bills, minimal yard excavation, and steady year-round comfort.

  • Permitting And Discharge Plan
  • Well Pump Integration Checks
  • Minimal Yard Excavation And Disturbance
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What We Do

Open loop installation that helps Home Owners use groundwater wells for efficient heating and cooling

Includes well pump integration, filtration and water treatment, discharge routing, flow controls, and heat exchanger tie-in.

  • Well Pump Integration & Filtration

    Integrate well pump, filtration, and flow controls for dependable open-loop operation.

  • Discharge Setup & Heat Exchanger

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

Why Denver Geothermal

Site-specific open-loop planning with written discharge estimates

Open-loop projects fail when water quality, discharge planning, or pump integration are overlooked; that leads to permit denials, extra costs, and poor performance.

Common Challenges

  • Discharge permitting can halt installations

    Unclear discharge routing or missing permits can halt work and require costly rerouting or mitigation near Clear Creek and municipal systems.

  • High mineral content increases filter maintenance

    Hard water from local wells accelerates filter clogging and media replacement, raising ongoing maintenance and operating costs.

  • Fractured bedrock complicates well integration

    Precambrian granite and fractured bedrock can make drilling and pump hookups more complex, increasing site prep and schedule risk.

How We Help

  • Up to 30% lower heating costs

    Properly integrated well pumps and heat exchangers can cut heating energy use by up to 30% compared with older fossil systems.

  • Reduced excavation for hillside properties

    Open-loop use of existing wells avoids closed-loop trenches, minimizing landscaping damage on Golden hillside and valley-floor lots.

  • Clear discharge and permitting plan

    We provide a written discharge routing and permit checklist matched to local water rules to avoid compliance delays.

  • Scheduled filtration and maintenance plans

    Itemized filter service schedules and pump checks for flow controls reduce unexpected downtime and replacement surprises.

Property owners with private wells seeking groundwater-based heating and cooling
Property owners with private wells seeking groundwater-based heating and cooling

Who We Help

Property owners with private wells seeking groundwater-based heating and cooling

Site-specific planning for well integration, permitting, and filtration in Golden properties.

  • Homeowners on Golden hillsides with private wells

    Owners of Golden hillside homes with private wells needing low-excavation geothermal that suits fractured bedrock and tight yard space.

  • Valley-floor ranch owners with abundant groundwater

    Ranch and valley properties with reliable well yields seeking a simpler loop option that avoids extensive trenching.

  • Builders and developers on I-70 corridor lots

    Developers planning new builds near I-70 and Clear Creek wanting written loop feasibility, permit guidance, and scheduling around winter access.

How We Work

How open loop installation works

Clear steps from site assessment to commissioning, including written scope, permit guidance, and post-install checks.

  1. Site assessment

    We evaluate well yield, water quality, and geology on your property, including fractured bedrock and slope constraints, to confirm feasibility.

  2. Detailed plan

    We produce an itemized plan covering pump integration, filtration, discharge routing, permits, and a commissioning checklist for your review.

  3. Install & commission

    Local crews integrate the well pump, install filters and heat exchanger tie-in, then run commissioning checks and hand over operation notes.

About This Service

About this Service

Open loop systems use groundwater from a well to supply a geothermal heat exchanger instead of buried closed loops. In Golden this is primarily relevant to valley‑floor properties and ranch lots that have access to wells. Hillside homes above fractured bedrock often need special consideration for drilling and discharge.

Golden’s geology of Precambrian granite and fractured bedrock can limit where wells are productive and may require specialized drilling rigs to reach water-bearing fractures. Where valley-floor wells exist, water-quality testing for hardness, silica, and dissolved solids is standard because mountain aquifers can carry mineral loads that affect heat exchanger life. Discharge routing and erosion controls are particularly important on steep slopes and talus zones. Heavy snow and mountain microclimates also narrow safe installation windows for drilling and tie-in work.

Practical expectations include potential need for deeper wells or specialized pumps, routine filtration maintenance, and engineered discharge solutions. When wells are not viable or discharge is restricted, vertical closed-loop drilling or hybrid options are considered. The deliverables include a geologic review, well-production testing, filtration and pump recommendations, and a commissioning checklist documenting flow and maintenance needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Practical answers on open-loop feasibility, costs, and compliance in Golden

Common concerns about wells, filtration, permitting, and winter installation windows.

Ignoring water quality leads to rapid filter clogging, reduced heat exchange, and higher energy use. Filter replacements and pump repairs can add hundreds to thousands of dollars over a few years.
Delaying permits can stop installation, force rerouting of discharge, and trigger costly mitigation. Permit issues commonly add weeks to schedules and several thousand dollars in corrective work.
Yes. Discharge routing and water-use rules often require county or state approvals. We include permit guidance and documentation to align with local water authorities.
It depends on well yield and geology. Fractured Precambrian granite may require deeper or altered integration methods; a site assessment confirms feasibility and options.
Frequency depends on water quality; typical maintenance ranges from every 3 to 12 months. High-mineral wells need more frequent media changes and checks of flow controls.
Properly designed heat exchanger and discharge plans do not introduce contaminants. Incorrect discharge or inadequate treatment can create risks, which is why permitting and treatment are essential.
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.