Short answer: The Cooling Company designs and installs commercial HVAC systems across Enterprise, NV, including VRF, rooftop packaged units, split systems, and VAV with building automation. We size every system to a Manual N load calculation, pull Clark County permits, and schedule phased or after-hours work so retail and medical tenants stay open. Licensed since 2011 (NV C-21 #0075849 and C-1D #0078611). Call (702) 567-0707.
HVAC built for the fastest-growing corner of the valley
Enterprise is one of the fastest-growing areas in the Las Vegas Valley, and the building stock shows it. Strip retail and restaurants keep filling in along the 215 Beltway, the St. Rose Parkway medical district keeps adding offices and surgical suites, and new mixed-use and class-A office space is rising next to the rooftops of Mountains Edge, Southern Highlands, and Silverado Ranch. Each of those building types asks something different from its mechanical system. The Cooling Company installs commercial HVAC that matches the building, the tenant, and the Mojave climate, not a one-size-fits-all box.
We are a local, family-owned contractor that has served Southern Nevada since 2011. Our commercial work runs on the same standard as our residential reputation: a 4.8-star average across 787-plus reviews. For business owners and general contractors in Enterprise, that means clean installs, honest sizing, and a system that holds up through July afternoons when the curb temperature on a flat roof can climb well past the air temperature.
Commercial systems we install in Enterprise
The right system depends on the building. Here is how we typically match equipment to the property types that define Enterprise.
- VRF (variable refrigerant flow): Our go-to for medical offices, dental and specialty suites, and multi-tenant class-A office along St. Rose Parkway and the 215. VRF gives each exam room, operatory, or office its own temperature zone, runs quietly, and modulates capacity so it sips power at part load. Heat-recovery VRF can move heat from a warm interior zone to a cooler perimeter zone in the same building.
- Rooftop packaged units (RTUs): The workhorse for strip retail, restaurants, and big-box space. A packaged gas/electric or heat-pump RTU keeps the mechanical footprint off the sales floor and concentrates service access on the roof. We spec high-IEER units with economizers for the shoulder seasons that Enterprise actually gets in spring and fall.
- VAV with built-up air handlers: For larger office floors and mixed-use cores, variable-air-volume distribution paired with a central air handler delivers tight zone control and lower fan energy than constant-volume systems.
- Light-commercial split systems: Smaller suites, back-of-house areas, server and IT rooms, and tenant build-outs where a packaged unit is overkill.
- Chilled-water and chiller plants: For the largest mixed-use and office projects where central plant capacity beats distributed equipment over the life of the building.
- Make-up air and kitchen ventilation: Restaurants serving the Mountains Edge and Southern Highlands crowd need engineered make-up air to balance the exhaust hood, hold the dining room comfortable, and pass inspection.
Load calculations and right-sizing for desert heat
Oversizing is the most common mistake we correct on commercial jobs in Enterprise. An oversized unit short-cycles, never pulls enough humidity or runtime to feel comfortable, wears out compressors early, and costs more up front. We start every install with a real commercial load calculation, ACCA Manual N for the building loads and Manual CS or D where duct and zone design apply, not a rule-of-thumb tonnage from the old equipment.
That calculation accounts for what makes the southwest valley its own design problem: extreme summer design temperatures, intense solar gain on west- and south-facing glass, the heat a flat commercial roof radiates back into the building, occupancy and equipment loads that swing hard between a packed restaurant and an empty one, and ventilation air that has to be conditioned before it ever reaches the space. For new construction we coordinate directly with the general contractor and the design team so the mechanical sizing matches the as-built envelope, glazing, and tenant program rather than a rough early estimate.
Clark County permitting and code compliance
Commercial HVAC in Enterprise is permitted and inspected through Clark County, since Enterprise is unincorporated. We handle the mechanical permit, the plan review coordination, and the inspections so the project stays on schedule. Our installs are built to the adopted International Mechanical Code and Clark County amendments, with the energy provisions that govern equipment efficiency, economizers, ventilation rates, and controls.
The Cooling Company holds Nevada contractor licenses C-21 (#0075849) and C-1D (#0078611), with a $700,000 bid limit, and we have been licensed since 2011. For tenant improvements and ground-up work we coordinate with the general contractor, the electrical and plumbing trades, and the fire and life-safety scope so duct smoke detectors, shutdowns, and economizer controls are all tied in correctly before final inspection.
Energy efficiency that pays back in Enterprise
Cooling dominates the energy bill for nearly every commercial building in the southwest valley, so efficiency is not a luxury line item here, it is the operating budget. We design for it on every install:
- High-IEER equipment: IEER rates part-load performance, which is where commercial units spend most of their hours. We spec to it because a building rarely runs at full design load.
- Air-side economizers: Enterprise gets enough mild spring and fall hours that free cooling with outside air meaningfully cuts compressor runtime. We verify the economizer dampers and controls actually work at startup, which is exactly where many installs fall short.
- Building automation (BAS) and smart controls: Scheduling, setbacks, zone control, and remote monitoring keep equipment from running full-tilt when the building is closed and flag problems before a tenant calls.
- Demand-control ventilation: CO2-based ventilation in restaurants and high-occupancy retail brings in only the outside air the space needs, instead of conditioning air for a full house all day.
Rebate programs in Nevada change year to year, so we will tell you what is actually available at the time of your project rather than promising a number that may have expired. Note that the federal commercial efficiency tax credits tied to the 25C and 25D residential programs are not a factor here, and the residential 25C and 25D credits expired December 31, 2025.
Phased and after-hours installs that keep you open
A retail tenant on the 215 Beltway cannot close the doors for a week of rooftop work, and a medical office cannot lose climate control during patient hours. We plan commercial installs around the business, not the other way around. That means phased changeouts that swap one unit or zone at a time, after-hours and overnight crane lifts and rooftop sets to keep the parking lot and storefront clear during business hours, temporary cooling where a space cannot go without, and tight coordination with property managers and adjacent tenants in shared centers. For new construction we sequence our scope to the general contractor's schedule so HVAC is not the trade that holds up the certificate of occupancy.
Maintenance handoff after the install
The install is not the finish line. We commission the system, verify airflow and refrigerant charge, confirm the economizer and controls operate, and walk your team or property manager through the new equipment. From there we offer commercial maintenance agreements built for desert duty: spring and fall service, coil cleaning that matters more here because of valley dust, filter programs, belt and bearing checks, and control verification. Regular maintenance is what protects the efficiency and the equipment life you paid for at installation.
Frequently asked questions
How long does a commercial HVAC installation take in Enterprise?
It depends on scope. A single rooftop unit changeout on existing curbs and electrical can be a one- or two-day job. A multi-zone VRF system for a medical suite, a VAV system for an office floor, or a ground-up new-construction project runs longer and is sequenced with the other trades. After we complete the load calculation and walk the site, we give you a firm schedule, including any after-hours or phased work needed to keep you open.
Do you handle the Clark County permits and inspections?
Yes. Because Enterprise is unincorporated, commercial HVAC work is permitted and inspected through Clark County. We pull the mechanical permit, coordinate plan review, and manage inspections through final sign-off. Our installs meet the adopted International Mechanical Code, Clark County amendments, and the applicable energy code.
Should I choose VRF or a rooftop packaged unit for my building?
VRF usually wins for medical offices and multi-tenant class-A space along St. Rose Parkway and the 215, where individual room zoning, quiet operation, and part-load efficiency matter most. Rooftop packaged units are typically the better fit for strip retail, restaurants, and big-box space, where keeping mechanical equipment off the floor and concentrating service on the roof is the priority. We size and recommend based on your building, occupancy, and budget after a load calculation, not a guess.
Can you work with my general contractor on a new build?
Yes. We coordinate directly with general contractors and design teams on new construction and tenant improvements across Enterprise. We match the mechanical sizing to the as-built envelope and tenant program, sequence our scope to the project schedule, and tie in the electrical, controls, and fire and life-safety work so the system passes inspection the first time.
What licenses and bid limit does The Cooling Company hold?
The Cooling Company has been licensed in Nevada since 2011 and holds C-21 (#0075849) and C-1D (#0078611) contractor licenses with a $700,000 bid limit. We carry a 4.8-star average across more than 787 reviews and serve commercial clients throughout the southwest Las Vegas Valley.
Replacing an aging commercial system rather than installing new? See our commercial HVAC replacement in Enterprise page for system assessment, old-equipment removal, and minimal-downtime swap details.
Get a commercial HVAC installation quote in Enterprise
Whether you are opening a restaurant near Mountains Edge, fitting out a medical suite on St. Rose Parkway, or building class-A office along the 215 Beltway, The Cooling Company will design and install an HVAC system sized for the job and built to last in the desert. Call (702) 567-0707 to schedule a site walk and load calculation.
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