For offices, retail units, restaurants and workshops, air conditioning has stopped being a nice-to-have — it's essential for staff productivity, customer comfort, and protecting stock and equipment. Once a building has more than a handful of rooms or zones, though, a simple single split system stops making sense. That's where VRF and multi-split systems come in.

Interested in a multi-split or VRF system? We design and install commercial systems across the South East. Request a free commercial survey →

Getting the System Size Right

Commercial spaces vary enormously in heat load. A server room, a busy kitchen and an open-plan office all have very different requirements, often within the same building. A proper heat-load survey ensures whatever system you install can cope on the hottest day of the year without short-cycling or running up unnecessary energy bills the rest of the time.

Multi-Split and VRF Systems

Larger premises typically benefit from VRF (Variable Refrigerant Flow) systems, which run multiple indoor units from a single outdoor condenser. The real advantage is zoning: a good VRF system lets you heat one zone while cooling another, simultaneously, from the same equipment. That's ideal for a building where a south-facing meeting room needs cooling in the afternoon while a north-facing office still needs heat first thing in the morning.

A simpler multi-split system — several indoor units on one outdoor unit, all running the same mode — is often the more cost-effective choice for smaller premises that don't need independent heating and cooling zones.

Your Legal Responsibilities

Commercial systems containing F-Gas refrigerants must be maintained by F-Gas certified engineers, and larger systems are legally required to have documented leak checks at set intervals. This isn't just good practice — it's a legal obligation under UK F-Gas regulations, and keeping on top of it is also what keeps your equipment warranty valid.

Running Costs and Downtime

A well-specified, regularly serviced VRF or multi-split system minimises both energy use and the risk of a breakdown during peak trading hours. For most commercial premises, a planned maintenance agreement is the most cost-effective way to guarantee uptime and budget predictably, rather than facing an unplanned call-out bill during your busiest week of the year.

Planning a commercial installation or upgrade?

We'll survey your building's actual heat load and recommend the right system — not the biggest one we can sell you.

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