Small-Town Lots, Big Energy Savings
One of the best things about Duson from a geothermal standpoint is space. Most residential properties here have more yard than homes in Lafayette’s tighter subdivisions, and horizontal loop installations cost less than vertical ones. More open ground means simpler trenching, shorter installation timelines, and lower overall project cost.
The prairie soil west of Lafayette is also cooperative. It’s soft, retains moisture well, and conducts heat efficiently. You don’t hit rock. You don’t fight hardpan clay. The excavation goes smoothly, and the loop field performs well once it’s in the ground.
What Makes Geothermal Different from Regular HVAC
Your current air conditioning system works against outdoor conditions. When it’s 97 degrees outside, the condenser has to push indoor heat into air that’s already hot. Efficiency drops, the compressor runs longer, and your electric bill reflects the struggle.
A geothermal system ignores outdoor conditions entirely. It exchanges heat with the ground, where temperatures in Lafayette Parish stay around 67 degrees year-round at a depth of five to six feet. The heat pump indoors connects to a buried loop field, and fluid circulating through those loops carries heat in or out of the ground depending on the season.
The result: 300 to 500 percent efficiency. For every dollar of electricity you spend running the system, you get three to five dollars of heating or cooling delivered to your home.
How the Loop Field Works
For a typical Duson home, the installer trenches across your yard at a depth of four to six feet. High-density polyethylene piping goes into the trenches in a series of loops, gets connected to manifolds, and then everything is backfilled and the surface restored. Within a growing season, you can’t tell anything was done.
The piping is rated for more than 50 years underground. No joints to leak, no corrosion, no degradation from soil chemistry. The fluid inside (a water and food-grade antifreeze mix) circulates continuously through the loop and through the indoor heat pump.
No outdoor condenser unit. No fan noise next to the house. No equipment exposed to Louisiana humidity and the occasional hurricane.
Payback and Tax Credits
Geothermal’s upfront cost is higher than conventional heating and cooling. The loop field is the main added expense, and there’s no way around it. But monthly operating costs are 40 to 60 percent lower than what you’re paying now, and that starts the day the system goes live.
Federal tax credits for geothermal installations currently cover a meaningful percentage of the total project cost, including equipment, loop field, and labor. No dollar cap applies. That credit can bring your net cost much closer to a conventional system than the sticker price suggests.
For a household that plans to stay in the home for 10-plus years, and most families in Duson aren’t going anywhere, the total cost of ownership favors geothermal. Lower monthly bills, far less maintenance, and equipment that lasts decades longer.
Getting an Honest Evaluation
Not every home is a perfect geothermal candidate, and we won’t pretend otherwise. Lot size, soil conditions, ductwork capacity, and electrical service all play into the decision. Some homes are better served by a high-efficiency heat pump system without the ground loop.
F & R Air Conditioning has been working in Acadiana since 1956. We’ll survey your Duson property, run the numbers, and give you a clear recommendation. Call (337) 893-5646 to set up a site visit.