Commercial HVAC Project Portfolio • NJ, PA & NY
Commercial HVAC Projects With Real Photo Proof
A projects page built to show where Sadowski HVAC works and the level of visible commercial execution clients can expect.
These image sets document retail stores, restaurants, an athletic facility, a veterinary hospital, and other specialty commercial locations. Instead of relying on generic stock visuals, this page uses real project photography that shows rooftops, storefronts, controls, exterior equipment, and finished interiors where the quality of the work remains part of the building experience.
NJ HVAC License #13VH11514600 • 633 Pierce Ave Unit 7, Linden, NJ 07036 • Mon–Fri 8:00 AM–5:00 PM
- 66 Uploaded Images Documented photos of real rooftops, interiors, controls, storefronts, and equipment layouts.
- 6 Featured Cases Selected projects with fuller context and complete image sets.
- 18+ Locations Additional completed work listed across Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York.
Why This Projects Page Says More Than a Gallery Could
A commercial portfolio should help visitors understand not only where a company has worked, but what kind of project conditions it can handle. The value in these photos is that they show real commercial environments: open ceilings, rooftop layouts, visible controls, public-facing interiors, and building exteriors tied to named locations.
Signal 01
Documented, Not Generic
The project sets include recognizable storefronts, stadium and facility exteriors, rooftop equipment, and finished interiors. That makes the page feel grounded in real work rather than broad claims.
Signal 02
Visible Workmanship
Several projects show exposed ceilings, public dining or retail areas, and organized exterior equipment placement. Visitors can judge neatness, coordination, and finish awareness from the photos themselves.
Signal 03
Range Across Property Types
This portfolio is not built around a single use case. It covers bookstores, apparel retail, restaurant space, an athletic facility, a veterinary hospital, and additional specialty commercial locations.
Featured Commercial HVAC Projects
The descriptions below stay close to what is actually visible in the photo documentation and the project information provided. That keeps the page credible while still helping future clients understand why each project matters.
Project 01
Barnes & Noble
720 W. Lancaster Ave, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010
- Retail
- Bookstore
- Rooftop
- Exposed Ceiling
The Barnes & Noble project is one of the clearest examples on the page of commercial HVAC work completed in a space people actively use and see. The roof images show a broad mechanical layout across the building, while the interior photos show a finished bookstore with painted open ceilings, visible distribution, and customer-facing areas where the overhead result remains part of the environment.
That combination matters because it shows work completed in a large retail setting where comfort could not come at the expense of presentation, and where visible ceiling conditions required the installation to feel organized inside the occupied space as well as on the roof.
- Roof-level images document mechanical work across a broad commercial footprint.
- Interior photos show finished sales-floor conditions with visible overhead elements in public view.
- Storefront images connect the project to a recognizable national retail location.
Project 02
New Balance
115 Coulter Ave, Ardmore, PA 19003
- Retail
- Branded Storefront
- Controls
- Back of House
The New Balance project is valuable because it documents both the polished customer-facing side of the store and the more technical side behind it. The sales-floor images show a refined branded interior, while the back-of-house photos reveal exposed mechanical runs and a thermostat interface that make the documentation feel more complete and more credible.
For a visitor, this project helps communicate that Sadowski HVAC can work in spaces where the result has to satisfy both appearance and practical serviceability. That balance is important in many modern retail environments, and the photo set supports it well.
- Sales-floor photography shows visible ceiling integration in a carefully finished retail interior.
- Back-of-house and controls images help document the operating side of the project, not just the polished front.
- Storefront photos tie the work to a clearly identifiable branded tenant location.
Project 03
Villanova Lacrosse Stadium
800 E. Lancaster Ave, Villanova, PA 19085
- Athletic Facility
- Institutional
- Rooftop
- Education
The Villanova Lacrosse Stadium project gives the page a different kind of weight. Instead of a storefront or dining room, the images place the work in an athletic and institutional setting. The roof photos show commercial equipment at the stadium building, and the facade photos tie the project directly to the location.
That broadens the portfolio beyond tenant spaces and helps communicate experience in larger-use facilities where site context and building identity matter just as much as the equipment itself.
- Rooftop photography documents visible commercial equipment in an institutional setting.
- Building images clearly identify the Villanova stadium location.
- The project adds athletic and educational facility relevance to the overall portfolio.
Project 04
St. George Hunt Veterinary Hospital
635 Conestoga Rd, Villanova, PA 19085
- Veterinary
- Specialty Facility
- Exterior Units
- Medical Setting
The St. George Hunt Veterinary Hospital project is visually straightforward, which works in its favor. The photos focus on grouped exterior equipment placed along the building with clean spacing and consistent layout. The facility images then confirm the property itself, grounding the project in a real veterinary setting rather than leaving it as an anonymous equipment shot.
For prospective clients, the value here is the impression of organized exterior execution in a specialty-use environment where dependable operation and tidy installation both matter.
- Exterior unit photos show a clean, grouped arrangement beside the building.
- Facility photos establish the project within a veterinary medical environment.
- The project adds healthcare-adjacent depth to the broader commercial portfolio.
Project 05
CAVA
349 NJ-70, Marlton, NJ 08053
- Restaurant
- Rooftop
- Dining Interior
- Tenant Space
The CAVA project is one of the most balanced sets on the page because it documents the full story of a commercial tenant space. The roof photos show the mechanical side of the work, the exterior photos identify the restaurant, and the interior images show an open dining room where the ceiling remains part of the customer experience.
That makes the project persuasive. It shows a space where the rooftop installation mattered, the tenant identity mattered, and the finished interior still had to feel intentional once the restaurant was in use.
- Roof photos clearly document the commercial equipment above the space.
- Storefront views confirm the branded restaurant location.
- Dining-room photos show visible overhead conditions in a public-facing finished interior.
Project 06
Beach Bum Tanning
2060 US-9, Old Bridge, NJ 08857
- Specialty Retail
- Rooftop
- Storefront
- Commercial Tenant
The Beach Bum Tanning project works well as a supporting case because the photo set is clear and honest. It documents the branded storefront and pairs that with multiple rooftop views showing the mechanical layout above the tenant space. The result is a straightforward example of real commercial work without trying to imply more than the photos support.
Within the broader page, this project adds another recognizable tenant, another roof-level installation context, and another specialty retail environment to the portfolio.
- Storefront photos clearly identify the tenant and completed location.
- Roof images show a clean commercial roof layout with visible equipment placement.
- The project broadens the mix beyond standard retail and restaurant environments.
Facility Types Represented in the Portfolio
The strength of this page is not just the number of images. It is the variety of property types behind them. That range makes the portfolio more relevant to owners, facility managers, and contractors comparing whether Sadowski HVAC is the right fit for their space.
Retail & Branded Stores
Spaces where customers see the finished environment every day and where visible ceiling work has to feel as deliberate as the rest of the store.
Restaurants
Tenant spaces where roof-level equipment, exterior identity, and customer-area presentation all shape how the project is perceived.
Institutional & Athletic
Larger-use buildings where site context, facility identity, and commercial-grade equipment placement all matter.
Veterinary & Specialty Use
Facilities where organized exterior layout, dependable operation, and careful execution are especially important.
Additional Completed Projects in New Jersey
In addition to the featured photo-documented projects above, Sadowski HVAC has completed work for the following commercial locations in New Jersey.
- Beach Bum Tanning — 191 E Hanover Ave, Morristown, NJ 07960
- 2nd Street — 200 Washington St, Hoboken, NJ 07030
- LaserAway — 295 W Grand Ave, Montvale, NJ 07645
- Insomnia Cookies — 332 Bloomfield Ave, Montclair, NJ 07042
- Crumbl Cookies — 364 Summit Ave, Jersey City, NJ 07306
- Wendy’s — 1057 Valley Rd, Stirling, NJ 07980
- MilkShake Factory — 187 Columbia Turnpike, Florham Park, NJ 07932
- Honey Grove — 294 US-46, Elmwood Park, NJ 07407
Additional Completed Projects in New York
The broader project history also includes completed work in New York, adding more regional depth to the portfolio shown on this page.
- Warby Parker Ridge Hill — 43 Cole St, Yonkers, NY 10710
- Elm Community Charter School — 79-17 51st Ave, Elmhurst, NY 11373
- Red Eye NY — 355 W 41st, New York, NY 10036
- Maryknoll Fathers & Brothers — 55 Ryder Rd, Ossining, NY 10562
Project Portfolio FAQ
Are these actual Sadowski HVAC project photos?
Yes. This page is based on uploaded project imagery tied to named locations, including rooftops, storefronts, controls, exterior units, and finished commercial interiors.
Why are the project descriptions written so carefully?
Because the goal is credibility. The descriptions stay close to what is visible in the photos and the project information provided instead of inventing scope that is not documented.
What kinds of commercial properties does this page show experience with?
The portfolio includes bookstores, branded retail stores, a restaurant, an athletic facility, a veterinary hospital, and additional project history covering schools, cookies shops, specialty wellness brands, and other commercial tenant spaces.
Why does the page include both roofs and finished interiors?
Because together they tell a stronger story. Rooftop photos show the mechanical side of the work, while interior and storefront photos show how that work fits into real occupied commercial spaces.
Can we reach out about a similar commercial project?
Yes. If you are planning HVAC work for a retail location, restaurant, institutional facility, medical or veterinary space, or another commercial property, Sadowski HVAC can review the scope with you.
Discuss Your Commercial HVAC Project With a Team That Can Show Its Work
A projects page should reduce uncertainty. This one is built to do exactly that by showing documented examples of where Sadowski HVAC has already worked and the kind of finished commercial environments that trust the company with visible HVAC work.
- Property type: retail, restaurant, institutional, veterinary, school-related, or specialty commercial
- Project context: rooftop equipment, visible interiors, exterior units, controls, or branded tenant spaces
- Primary goal: performance, reliability, clean execution, finish awareness, or coordination with the building environment
- Region: New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, and nearby commercial service areas
















































