Right Next Door
Erath is just a few miles from our shop in Abbeville. We’ve been installing HVAC systems in this community since F & R Air Conditioning opened in 1956, and we’ve watched new homes go up along Highway 14, off Duhon Road, and in the neighborhoods between Erath and Abbeville. When someone builds a new home here, getting us involved early means getting a system that’s designed for the house, not just dropped into it.
New construction in Erath typically means custom-built homes on individual lots, not large planned developments. That gives you flexibility in system design but also means your HVAC contractor needs to evaluate your specific site, your specific plans, and your specific priorities rather than applying a one-size-fits-all solution.
The Engineering Behind Comfortable Homes
Calculating What Your Home Actually Needs
Manual J load calculations are the starting point for every new construction HVAC project. We calculate the heating and cooling loads room by room, using your architectural plans and the actual specifications for insulation, windows, doors, and roof. In Vermilion Parish, the cooling load dominates your system sizing because of our long, hot summers, but winter heating capacity still needs to be right for those damp cold fronts that push through from November through March.
Laying Out the Ductwork
Once we know the load, we design the duct system using Manual D calculations. Every supply register, return grille, and trunk line is sized for the airflow it needs to deliver. We work with your builder to route ductwork efficiently, keeping runs short and direct. Long, convoluted duct runs waste energy and create temperature differences between rooms.
For Erath homes with attic-run ductwork (which is most of them), proper duct insulation is especially important. Attic temperatures in south Louisiana can exceed 140 degrees in summer, and every foot of poorly insulated ductwork absorbs heat that your system has already spent energy removing.
Moisture Control in New Construction
Vermilion Parish’s humidity levels make moisture management a required part of HVAC design, not an optional upgrade. A new home built to modern energy codes is tighter than older construction, which is good for efficiency but means moisture has fewer pathways to escape naturally.
Your HVAC system must be sized to handle both the sensible load (temperature) and the latent load (moisture). Equipment that’s oversized for the space will satisfy the thermostat quickly but won’t run long enough to adequately dehumidify. The house feels cool but clammy, and over time, trapped moisture can lead to mold growth in walls and closets.
We select equipment that balances these loads and, where warranted, recommend integrating a whole-home dehumidifier into the system for independent humidity control.
Building Code and Beyond
Louisiana’s energy code sets minimum efficiency standards for new construction HVAC, but meeting code is just the baseline. We design systems that exceed code minimums where it makes economic sense, focusing on duct sealing, airflow verification, and equipment commissioning that many installers skip.
Building in Erath or the surrounding area? Call F & R Air Conditioning at (337) 893-5646. We’ll review your plans and put together a system design before your builder starts framing.