Our office is at 12244 Business Park Dr — two minutes from the I-15 and Bangerter Highway interchange in Draper. When you call our emergency line at any hour, you reach our own staff, not a third-party answering service. During business hours, most Draper valley-floor emergency calls have a technician on-site within 45–60 minutes. Overnight, under 75 minutes for the valley floor. SunCrest and Traverse Ridge: add 15–20 minutes for the access road under normal winter conditions, and we communicate honestly about ETAs when ice or snow makes Traverse Ridge Road or the SunCrest access roads slower.
Draper’s elevation range creates a genuine hierarchy of heating emergency severity. A no-heat event at a valley-floor address in January with 9°F overnight lows is serious. A no-heat event at SunCrest with –5°F overnight lows is more serious, and a no-heat event at SunCrest in a household with an infant or an elderly member with cardiovascular conditions is more serious still. We ask about household vulnerability when you call so we can triage accurately, not to screen calls — everyone gets a response — but to sequence dispatch correctly when multiple emergency calls are active simultaneously.
Draper’s heating season runs from October through April. The January and February cold snaps, with valley floor lows of 9°F and SunCrest lows reaching –5°F, represent the period where a no-heat event becomes a safety event fastest. We dispatch immediately — not next morning — when:
For no-heat calls that do not meet the above criteria — an afternoon no-heat call in October when outdoor temperature is 45°F and the home is at 62°F indoor with no vulnerable occupants — we schedule same-day where possible and next-morning where not, and communicate that distinction honestly rather than promising overnight service we would dispatch a technician for regardless of condition.
Draper’s July and August afternoons reach 96°F at the valley floor. Homes without functioning air conditioning in those conditions reach 85°F+ indoor temperatures within a few hours of the outdoor peak. We dispatch immediately for no-cool emergencies when indoor temperature has reached or is projected to reach 85°F and the household includes infants, elderly members, anyone on heat-altering medications (beta blockers, diuretics, antipsychotics, some antidepressants), or anyone with a physician-documented heat-sensitive condition. For households without these vulnerability factors, no-cool calls during Draper peak summer demand are urgent but typically handled as priority next-morning rather than same-night dispatch — we communicate this honestly at the time of the call.
A carbon monoxide detector alarm that has not cleared, or one that cleared and reactivated in the same heating session, is a confirmed CO source event. Immediate action before calling us: evacuate the home and call 911. The fire department has professional CO detection equipment and is the correct first responder for an active CO alarm. After the fire department clears the home and identifies the CO source as a gas appliance, call us for the appliance repair. We respond to post-fire-department CO appliance repair calls on an emergency priority basis with same-night dispatch.
In Draper, the combination of high-altitude-related combustion problems and the frequency of altitude-derate-omitted furnaces makes CO incidents more common than in lower-elevation markets. SunCrest and Traverse Ridge furnaces that have been running without altitude derate for 5–15 years have accumulated heat exchanger fatigue from rich-burn combustion; a heat exchanger breach in one of these furnaces produces a CO-in-return-air situation that is silent until the CO detector trips or a household member develops symptoms. We take these calls seriously.
Detectable gas odor or audible hiss at a gas line or appliance connection: evacuate, do not operate any electrical switches, call 911 first, then Dominion Energy at 1-800-323-5517, then us after the scene is cleared. We do not enter a home with an uncleared active gas leak. After clearance by the fire department or Dominion Energy, we respond immediately for the appliance or gas line repair.
Active water leaks from boilers, circulator pumps, zone valve bodies, or hydronic distribution lines require same-day response to prevent finished space water damage. Immediate action: shut off the water supply to the boiler at the dedicated supply shutoff valve on the cold water inlet, or at the main whole-house water shutoff if you cannot locate the boiler supply valve. Then call us for emergency dispatch.
The person who answers will confirm your address, the nature of the emergency, whether any immediate safety actions are needed, and the household’s vulnerability status. You will receive an honest arrival estimate based on the on-call technician’s current location and road conditions, not a scripted range. For SunCrest and Traverse Ridge calls during winter weather events, we confirm road conditions on the Traverse Ridge Road and the SunCrest Blvd access before quoting an ETA.
Our emergency truck serves Draper with the parts inventory appropriate for this specific market. The most common Draper emergency repair parts on every overnight truck:
After-hours emergency calls carry an after-hours labor rate above our standard daytime labor rate. This rate is disclosed when you call to schedule the emergency dispatch, before the technician is sent. Parts are billed at standard pricing. The $89 diagnostic fee applies and is credited against the repair if it proceeds on the same visit. We do not advertise “no extra charge for nights and weekends” because that is not the truth — maintaining a staffed 24/7 on-call capability has a real cost and we pass a portion of it on transparently rather than hiding it in inflated parts pricing.
SunCrest and Traverse Ridge emergency calls have access-specific considerations that we plan for in advance:
Our 24/7 emergency line is the same number as our main line. After business hours, you reach our on-call staff directly — not a voicemail, not a call center. We dispatch from 12244 Business Park Dr in Draper, the closest possible location to serve all Draper neighborhoods including SunCrest and Traverse Ridge.