Ducted concealed systems: out of sight, outstanding comfort
Heat pump comfort with nothing on the wall to look at. The air handler tucks into a ceiling, soffit or mechanical space and moves even, quiet air through discreet vents — a clean fit for new builds, renovations, basements and additions.
The equipment disappears; the comfort doesn't
A ducted concealed unit does the same job as a wall-mounted heat pump head, but the air handler lives out of the room — above a ceiling, in a closet or in the mechanical space — and feeds short duct runs to slim supply grilles. The room keeps its finished look, and the air arrives evenly instead of blowing from a single point.
Because we size the unit and design the short duct layout to the space, the system runs at a low, quiet velocity and holds an even temperature corner to corner. It's a natural choice when you're finishing a basement, building an addition, or renovating and don't want head units on the walls.
- ✓ Hidden air handler — no wall units in the living space
- ✓ Even airflow through discreet supply grilles
- ✓ Quiet operation from equipment kept out of the room
- ✓ Heating and cooling from one efficient system
- ✓ Suited to new builds, renovations, basements and additions
Built for spaces where the finish matters
New builds
Designed into the plans for a clean ceiling and even comfort from day one.
Renovations
Comfort added without covering finished walls with equipment.
Basements
Steady heat and cooling in a space that's usually the last to get comfortable.
Additions
A dedicated system that carries the new square footage without straining the old one.
Ducted concealed systems, answered
What is a ducted concealed system?
It's a heat pump air handler hidden in a ceiling, soffit, closet or mechanical space that delivers conditioned air through short duct runs to discreet supply grilles. You get the comfort of a heat pump without a wall-mounted head unit in the room.
Is it a good fit for a renovation or addition?
Yes. A concealed unit is a common choice for basements, additions and renovations where you want even temperatures and a clean finished look, and where there's a ceiling or soffit space to route short ducts.
Is a ducted concealed unit quieter than a wall head?
Sized and ducted properly, yes — the air handler sits away from living space and the air arrives through grilles at a low velocity, so the room stays quiet.
Can one system cover a whole floor?
Often, depending on layout and load. We run the calculation to decide whether one concealed unit covers the area evenly or whether the space is better served by more than one zone.
Want comfort without the wall units?
Tell us about the space and we'll design a concealed system that fits it. Quotes are free.