Projects

Residential and commercial case studies across the Peninsula.

Hyde works across coastal homes, family homes, renovations, workplaces, and fit-outs, with the final scope shaped around the building, the constraints, and the standard of the finished result.

Residential and commercial work both matter on this site.

The old WordPress site leaned heavily on generic service copy. These case studies show the kind of residential and commercial work Hyde is trusted to deliver when the brief, the audience, and the real site constraints are treated seriously.

What tends to matter on real jobs

  • Whether the system matches the building and the way it is actually used
  • Whether zoning, access, and controls have been thought through early enough
  • Whether the install feels coordinated instead of improvised on site
  • Whether the final handover is something the client can trust and live with

Residential case studies

Homeowners need proof that the recommendation will suit the house, not just sell a system.

Residential | Point Leo

Whole-home reverse-cycle upgrade for cleaner everyday comfort

The homeowners wanted one integrated system that could replace ageing equipment and make the main living spaces feel more consistent through summer and winter.

Challenge: Patchwork heating and room-by-room cooling were creating uneven comfort, too many compromises, and a finished result that never really felt resolved.

  • Mapped the active rooms and likely daily use before choosing the replacement path.
  • Specified a zoned ducted layout that gave whole-home coverage without cluttering the home with multiple visible units.
  • Treated presentation, grille placement, and day-to-day usability as part of the scope rather than details to fix later.

Outcome: The home ended up with cleaner whole-home coverage, clearer control, and a replacement outcome that suited the way the property is actually used.

Residential | Mount Eliza

Targeted split-system upgrade for a renovated home

A renovated home needed stronger comfort in the rooms the family lived in most, without turning the project into a full-house ducted installation.

Challenge: The owners wanted better output and quieter operation, but only in the zones that mattered every day, not in rooms that would rarely be used.

  • Confirmed which rooms genuinely needed conditioning and which did not.
  • Matched the split-system strategy to the renovated layout and the home's finish expectations.
  • Kept the scope focused so the install solved the real comfort problem without overspending on unnecessary coverage.

Outcome: The result gave the family a cleaner, more practical upgrade path with targeted comfort where it mattered most and simpler ongoing use.

Commercial case studies

Commercial clients need clarity on delivery, coordination, and handover, not just equipment lists.

Commercial | Mornington

Office fit-out planned around occupancy, controls, and handover

A workplace fit-out needed a commercial system that would suit daily staff use, client-facing spaces, and the broader programme on site.

Challenge: The job depended on getting zones, plant locations, access, and trade coordination sorted before late-stage changes started to cost time.

  • Reviewed the tenancy layout and the way staff and visitors would actually use the space.
  • Allowed for controls, plant access, and serviceability as part of the early plan rather than an afterthought.
  • Kept the HVAC scope aligned with the programme so the finished handover made sense to the client, not just the installer.

Outcome: The finished system supported the tenancy properly and reduced the risk of awkward site recovery, rushed redesign, or a confusing handover.

Commercial | Frankston

Commercial upgrade with staged delivery and maintenance in view

A broader commercial site needed an HVAC pathway that balanced immediate comfort issues with staged works, service access, and longer-term reliability.

Challenge: The client could not afford a recommendation that solved a short-term fault but ignored access, staged delivery, or what ongoing maintenance would look like later.

  • Separated the urgent comfort issues from the longer-term upgrade decisions.
  • Planned the scope around staged delivery, maintenance access, and the realities of an occupied site.
  • Built the recommendation around reliability and serviceability, not just the initial equipment choice.

Outcome: That gave the client a clearer commercial path: a system decision that fit the site now and a support structure that still made sense after handover.