Denver Geothermal
4.6(60+ Reviews) *

Open Loop Installation Littleton

A dependable geothermal system using your well - steady heat through winters with clear filtration and discharge plans.

  • Water Rights Review
  • Filtration & Pump Integration
  • Site-specific loop planning
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What We Do

Open loop installation that helps Home Owners use on-site groundwater for heating and cooling

Includes well pump integration, filtration, heat exchanger connection, discharge routing, and permit guidance.

  • Well Pump Integration & Filtration

    Integrate the well pump, install filtration and water-treatment components, and configure flow controls for stable open loop flow.

  • Discharge & Heat Exchanger Connection

    Route discharge, connect to the heat exchanger, and run performance checks to verify compliant, efficient heat exchange.

Why Denver Geothermal

Site-specific open loop planning with written filtration and discharge plans

Open loop installs fail when water quality, pump integration, or discharge planning are overlooked; the result is equipment failure, permit delays, and higher maintenance costs.

Common Challenges

  • Water-quality issues foul heat exchangers

    Hard water, sediment, or high mineral content can clog exchangers, shorten pump life, and sharply increase maintenance and replacement costs.

  • Discharge permitting can delay projects

    Missing discharge approvals or unsuitable routing can trigger stop-work orders, rework, and fines, especially near Chatfield Reservoir and local waterways.

  • Foothill clay and slopes complicate installation

    Steep terrain and clay soils increase the need for vertical bores or controlled trenching, adding time and specialised equipment needs.

How We Help

  • Well pump integration for steady flow

    Tie the well pump into the loop with dedicated flow controls to reduce pump cycling and stabilise heat-exchange performance.

  • Filtration plans to protect exchangers

    Custom filtration and water-treatment specs prevent mineral fouling and extend heat exchanger life and operational efficiency.

  • Compliant discharge routing and permits

    Documented discharge options and permit coordination avoid delays and ensure runoff meets Arapahoe County requirements.

  • Reduce energy use up to 30%

    Open loop systems using groundwater can lower heating energy consumption by up to 30% compared with older HVAC systems.

  • Loop design for hillside properties

    Loop sizing and choice of trenching or vertical bore methods account for foothill clay, sandstone bedrock, and slope constraints.

Property owners and managers with on-site wells or hillside lots
Property owners and managers with on-site wells or hillside lots

Who We Help

Property owners and managers with on-site wells or hillside lots

  • Home Owners with wells and ranch properties

    Homeowners on Ken Caryl, near Chatfield Reservoir, or on ranch lots needing well integration, filtration plans, and low-disruption loop layout.

  • Hillside custom home owners planning loops

    Owners of hillside custom homes who need loop options sized for steep slopes, foothill clay soils, and limited yard space.

  • Property developers choosing loop systems

    Developers and builders in Arapahoe County comparing horizontal, vertical, or open loop options for new subdivisions and gated communities.

  • Commercial owners with steady heating demand

    Small business and facility owners seeking predictable heating using on-site groundwater and documented discharge and maintenance plans.

How We Work

How Open Loop Installation Works

A clear, staged process from site assessment to commissioning and follow-up.

  1. Site assessment

    We evaluate well yield, water quality, soils, slope, and discharge options and deliver a loop feasibility report for your property.

  2. Design & permits

    We specify filtration, pump integration, heat exchanger connections, and a discharge plan, then prepare itemized estimates and permit documentation.

  3. Install & commission

    Install pump ties, filtration, and exchanger connections, run performance checks, complete commissioning, and schedule post-install follow-up.

About This Service

About this Service

Open loop geothermal uses an on-site well as the circulating source. In Littleton, this is most applicable to valley or low-lying lots where wells access sufficient groundwater and where slope constraints make horizontal loops impractical. It can suit hillside homes that already have reliable well infrastructure.

Littleton’s foothill clay soils and sandstone bedrock introduce two main challenges: well siting on steep slopes and variable drillability through sandstone. A geotechnical review and a production test are standard to confirm sustainable flow and static water level. Water-quality testing should check for sediment, hardness, and organics; steep terrain often requires engineered discharge routes to avoid erosion and protect downslope properties. Heavy spring snowmelt and intermittent runoff also influence discharge design and installation timing.

Expect specialized pump integration and possibly a booster pump if static head or pressure losses are significant. Routine filtration maintenance and seasonal inspections are practical obligations. If the well cannot sustain the required GPM or if discharge land disposal is restricted, a closed-loop or mixed loop solution may be better. The service includes site evaluation, filtration and discharge recommendations, and a commissioning checklist documenting flow and treatment requirements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common concerns about open loop installs in Littleton

Practical details on water quality, permits, timelines, and maintenance.

Untreated water can cause mineral scaling and sediment build-up that reduces heat-transfer efficiency, shortens exchanger and pump life, and leads to costly repairs or replacement—often running into thousands for exchanger or pump replacement.
Delaying permits risks stop-work orders, rework, and fines. It can also force costly rerouting of discharge lines if initial plans conflict with local water protections or reservoir buffers.
Often yes. Discharge rules vary by Arapahoe County and local water authorities. We document discharge options and help prepare permit applications to meet local requirements.
After a site assessment and permits, typical installations take one to three days. Steep slopes, bore work, or complex permitting can extend the schedule by weeks.
Routine maintenance includes filter replacement, pump checks, and periodic water-quality tests. Scheduled filtration upkeep prevents most exchanger issues and keeps performance steady.
They can be, provided groundwater yield and quality are sufficient. Hillside lots may need vertical bores or tailored routing to manage slope and bedrock constraints.
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.