Reference Index · Communities · 32256 / 32224 / 32225
Southside Communities We Serve for Sub-Zero Repair
Coverage is deliberately tight — a short list of gated and master-planned communities where the equipment, water, and access are documented in detail.
Sub-Zero Repair Deerwood covers the gated Southside corridor — Pablo Creek Reserve, Glen Kernan, and Queen's Harbour, plus Deerwood Country Club, Tamaya, and Hampton Park in ZIPs 32256, 32224, and 32225. Each community page documents its equipment profile and gate routine. Direct line (904) 893-3248, weekdays 07:00–19:00.
For Sub-Zero repair across Deerwood and the Jacksonville Southside, call (904) 893-3248 or book online.
Community coverage pages
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Pablo Creek Reserve
2005+ · 32224 · Attended gate
A Davis-developed enclave of roughly 270 homes south of JTB, near Mayo Clinic. The corridor's densest PRO 48 and BI column installed base, now in its first failure window.
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Glen Kernan
1997+ · 32224 · Golf & CC
Golf-course streets near UNF, started in 1997, with adjacent Hampton Park. BI-era boards, ice systems, and condensers crossing the 10-to-20-year service threshold.
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Queen's Harbour
Early 1990s · 32225 · Yacht & CC
Built around a spring-fed lagoon with a 100-ft Intracoastal lock. Legacy 500/600 stock plus brackish-air condenser corrosion despite the freshwater setting.
Deerwood Country Club, Tamaya, and Hampton Park round out the corridor; all fall inside the same weekday coverage. For a warm unit in the largest community, the Pablo Creek not-cooling page carries the full symptom triage.
Community at a glance: era, equipment, local hazard
The corridor's communities differ less in the repair and more in the clock and the climate each unit lives under. This table is the short version of why a model alone does not tell the whole story.
| Community | Era & ZIP | Equipment & local hazard |
|---|---|---|
| Pablo Creek Reserve | 2005+ · 32224 | PRO 48 and BI columns; synchronized first-failure clock |
| Glen Kernan | 1997+ · 32224 | BI from 2008–2015 remodels; hard-water ice faults |
| Queen's Harbour | Early 1990s · 32225 | Legacy 500/600 stock; brackish-air corrosion |
| Deerwood Country Club | Mid-1960s · 32256 | Three remodel generations, from 561s to CL columns |
One condition runs through every row: JEA water at 14–28 grains per gallon and the lightning grid behind most board failures. The failure modes index covers how those shared hazards show up as symptoms.
Coverage questions
- Why do you serve a small set of communities instead of all of Jacksonville?
- A tight radius keeps drive time short and gate procedures on file. Deerwood, Pablo Creek Reserve, Glen Kernan, and Queen's Harbour cluster within ZIPs 32256, 32224, and 32225 and share housing-stock age, equipment, water hardness, and storm exposure. Concentrating there lets the diagnosis go deeper than a metro-wide generalist can manage.
- Do you cover communities not listed here?
- Adjacent addresses in the same ZIPs — Tamaya and Hampton Park among them — fall inside the same coverage, and service-area overlap at the margins is normal. The pages here detail the communities where the local specifics are distinct enough to document. Call the direct line if your address sits just outside and we will confirm coverage.
- How is gate access handled across these communities?
- The same way everywhere: at booking we log your address, the visitor-list name, and the guardhouse procedure, then send the technician's name and vehicle ahead. Whether it is Pablo Creek's attended 24/7 gate or Queen's Harbour's yacht-club routine, authorization clears before arrival so the appointment starts in your kitchen.
- Why does the community matter to the repair, not just the model?
- Because build era, water, and air change which parts fail and when. A Queen's Harbour box from the early 1990s faces brackish-air condenser corrosion and scarce 600-series boards; a Pablo Creek PRO 48 from 2005 faces synchronized board-and-fan fatigue; a Glen Kernan BI from a 2010 remodel is squarely in its first ice-valve window. Same brand, different local clocks — which is why each community page documents its own profile.
- Do all three communities share the same water and storm exposure?
- Water and lightning, yes; salt, no. All three run on JEA municipal supply at 14–28 grains per gallon, and all sit under Northeast Florida's heavy lightning load, so hard-water ice faults and surge-locked boards appear everywhere. Queen's Harbour adds brackish Intracoastal air that the inland-feeling Glen Kernan and Pablo Creek streets mostly avoid, which is why corrosion shows up on the water and not off it.
Put a Southside Sub-Zero specialist on the schedule.