Providence's water supply comes from the Scituate Reservoir, delivering moderately hard water with mineral content that accelerates scale formation inside tankless heat exchangers. This buildup reduces the unit's ability to respond quickly to demand changes, making the delay between burner ignition and hot water delivery longer. Combine that with the city's aging housing stock, where many homes have 60 to 100 feet of piping between the basement mechanical room and upstairs bathrooms, and you get extended cold water slugs. Newer construction in areas like the Jewelry District has shorter runs, but older neighborhoods bear the brunt of this issue.
Working in Providence means understanding how triple-deckers, Victorians, and Colonial homes were plumbed before tankless technology existed. We have retrofitted hundreds of these systems and know the challenges of integrating modern equipment into century-old infrastructure. Local building inspectors expect proper permitting for gas line work and backflow prevention on recirculation systems. We maintain strong relationships with the Providence Building Department and pass inspections the first time. When you hire us, you get a team that knows this city's plumbing landscape inside and out.