Station 7 in Adams Canyon is swapping 1990-era PTACs for heat-pump units
Teton County commissioners are being asked to approve a $23,587 contract with LONG Building Technologies to replace four failing PTAC units that cool and now will primarily heat and cool the second floor at Fire/EMS Station 7.
Fire/EMS Station 7 up Adams Canyon is due for a straightforward, keep-the-building-working upgrade: four packaged terminal units from the original 1990 HVAC era are at end of life, and the county wants to replace them with heat-pump PTACs tied into the building automation system. The Board of County Commissioners packet recommends awarding the work to LONG Building Technologies as the lowest qualified bidder; two other bids were deemed non-responsive (one skipped the automation requirement, one missed the deadline), per the staff report in the Station 7 PTAC contract packet.
The contract amount is $23,587, covering four ZoneAire Premier R-32 series heat-pump PTACs plus controls, programming, and commissioning. Staff says the new units will become the primary HVAC system for the station’s second-floor conference areas, with funding coming from the EMP budget line that still had about $771,337 available as of May 6.
Source Documents
| Date | Title | Type |
|---|---|---|
| May 19, 2026 | Contract for Heat Pump PTAC Units at Station 7 Packet | packet |