ACES Energy

ACES Energy Your trusted Geothermal Heat Pump & Solar PV experts serving the Finger Lakes. Let's work towards a sustainable future together!

Eco-friendly solutions for heating, cooling and powering residential & commercial spaces. Renewable Energy Specialists including Geothermal Heating & Cooling, Solar Electric, Solar PV, Solar Hot Water, Solar Thermal, Complex HVAC, Radiant Heat . Located in Honeoye Falls and service Upstate, NY, Rochester, Buffalo, Finger Lakes

Spring outside. Summer prep underground. ☀️🌎 Loop field going in, foundation coring underway, and Lance still getting it...
05/26/2026

Spring outside. Summer prep underground. ☀️🌎 Loop field going in, foundation coring underway, and Lance still getting it done after 16 years with ACES. 💪

This is what geothermal season looks like.

As we observe Memorial Day, we take time to reflect on the service and sacrifice of the men and women who gave their liv...
05/25/2026

As we observe Memorial Day, we take time to reflect on the service and sacrifice of the men and women who gave their lives for our country.

Our office is closed today, with the team returning to work on Tuesday May 26th.

Most people hit snooze on Mondays… Our crew hits the ground digging 🚜🚧
05/04/2026

Most people hit snooze on Mondays… Our crew hits the ground digging 🚜🚧

04/30/2026

What does it take to send 400 feet of piping straight into the earth for a vertical loop? Watch closely.

At the Villager Construction HQ project, a continuous HDPE loop is carefully suspended, then fed into a specialized looper. The looper doesn’t just guide the pipe, it drives it, steadily pushing the loop into the borehole. Sometimes, gravity isn’t enough.

That’s when the crew steps in, hands on, applying force, guiding, and pushing. We're thankful to have a strong team behind each project, literally and figuratively 💪

👀 I spy...An excavatorA loopfieldSome GREAT dirtand a homeowner very excited to watch their loopfield installation...Jus...
04/29/2026

👀 I spy...

An excavator
A loopfield
Some GREAT dirt
and a homeowner very excited to watch their loopfield installation...

Just a few of our favorite things ✨

Earth Week Day 6 Spotlight 🌎 Meet Evan Lowenstein, our very own ⚡ Energy Envoy ⚡If you’ve spent any time at local events...
04/25/2026

Earth Week Day 6 Spotlight 🌎 Meet Evan Lowenstein, our very own ⚡ Energy Envoy ⚡

If you’ve spent any time at local events or community gatherings, chances are you’ve crossed paths with Evan. He’s the one sparking conversations, answering questions, and sharing his passion for renewable energy, especially geothermal. And it’s not just talk… he lives it every day. What started as Evan being a supporter of geothermal, and an ACES customer, turned into a team member wanting to take industry action.

In the heart of NOTA in Rochester, Evan and his family have built a lifestyle rooted in environmental stewardship:
🐛 Vermicomposting to reduce waste
🌼 A pollinator-friendly front yard buzzing with life
💧 Rain barrels capturing porch roof runoff
🐦 Hand-built bird nest lofts
🦋 Protecting and tenting native milkweed as it grows all over the front and back yards!
🫛 Starting veggie plants for outside cultivation outside in a little greenhouse and inside the house
🚴 Driving as little as possible - When necessary, driving a plug in gas electric hybrid car for peak city driving mileage
🚴 Using bicycle and cargo trailer for as many local trips as possible, with bagels and coffee as primary fuel sources
🌎 And of course, promoting geothermal to all who walk or drive by!

And beneath it all? A vertical geothermal loopfield powering his home's heating and cooling system.

Evan brings the same energy to our team that he brings to his community: Educating, inspiring, and leading by example. His commitment to sustainability isn’t a campaign… it’s a way of life.

We’re proud to have him helping us spread the word about geothermal and building a more sustainable future, one conversation at a time.

Day 5 of our Earth Week employee features! 🌎 As we continue highlighting our team’s sustainable living activities this w...
04/24/2026

Day 5 of our Earth Week employee features! 🌎 As we continue highlighting our team’s sustainable living activities this week, Benzo’s home tells a story of sustainability both above and below ground.

When the front yard of his home near the Bay in Irondequoit was excavated for a vertical geothermal loop (2023), it left a blank slate. Instead of simply restoring the lawn, Benzo rebuilt with intention.

🪻 Each year, the space evolves with a focus on native plant varieties that support bees, butterflies, and the ecosystems that rely on them. This season, he’s expanding further, incorporating edible plants alongside the pollinator’s habitat.

But one of the most important choices he makes is what he doesn’t do.

🐞 Each Spring, Benzo holds off on cleaning up the garden until late May. After a long winter, pollinators and beneficial insects rely on the stems and leaf litter for shelter and rest. Disturbing that too early can disrupt their life cycles before the season even begins.

Beyond his home, Benzo also serves on the conservation board for the Town of Irondequoit, supporting local initiatives and helping others take steps toward more sustainable practices.

Photos shown...
🐌 The start of the garden
🐛 A young monarch butterfly larva within their pollinator garden
🚧 The yard after the geothermal loopfield installation

Earth Week: Day 4!  Steve is investing in the future, one tree at a time 🌳 At his property in Bloomfield and his family’...
04/23/2026

Earth Week: Day 4! Steve is investing in the future, one tree at a time 🌳

At his property in Bloomfield and his family’s orchard in Olean, he helps produce around 30 bushels of apples each year. But the harvest doesn’t stop at fresh fruit.

🍎 A portion of those apples is pressed into cider, turning seasonal abundance into something that can be shared, preserved, and enjoyed beyond the harvest window. The rest are eaten fresh, passed along to friends and family, and enjoyed close to home.

This year, he’s expanding the orchard by planting cherry trees, adding diversity to his crop and continuing to produce on his own property 🍒

Happy Earth Day! Today we’re highlighting AJ’s homestead, a working example of sustainability in motion, season after se...
04/22/2026

Happy Earth Day! Today we’re highlighting AJ’s homestead, a working example of sustainability in motion, season after season 🌎

Each year, the Heiligman's prepare their land with intention. Vegetables like potatoes, carrots, onions, and beets anchor the garden, while fruit trees continue to mature, peaches, nectarines, cherries, apples, and pears. A growing flock of chickens rounds it out, providing fresh eggs for family and friends.

This isn’t hobby gardening. It’s food production at a household scale. Supplying even part of what a family consumes reduces dependence on long supply chains, stabilizes food costs, and builds resilience through what the land can actually produce locally and seasonally.

Site conditions matter. Located near a body of water, the property benefits from a moderated microclimate. Slightly warmer nights and a longer shoulder season improve crop viability and extend what can be grown successfully year to year.

But spring is never without risk 🌨

Late frost events remain one of the biggest threats to fruit production, especially during bud break. To protect the coming harvest, AJ covers trees to retain heat or mists with water during freezes - Where freezing water releases latent heat and helps shield delicate buds.

At its core, land management is rooted in respect. Respect for seasonal timing, environmental conditions, and for the capacity of Mother Nature to produce when she’s supported rather than pushed. When you work with those systems instead of against them, they tend to give back in measurable ways.

This Earth Week, we’re recognizing the people who live that mindset, not just in what they build, but in how they live 🌱

Earth Week, Day 2 🌎All week long, we’re showcasing the ways our team connects sustainability from their work into their ...
04/21/2026

Earth Week, Day 2 🌎

All week long, we’re showcasing the ways our team connects sustainability from their work into their everyday lives, and today, we’re in the garden with Belle 🌸

💐 Belle grows 20+ varieties of cut flowers for bouquets to share with friends and family throughout the Summer

Many cut flowers available in the U.S. are imported, traveling thousands of miles before they ever reach a vase. Along the way comes a significant carbon footprint, transportation, refrigeration, and storage. Growing flowers locally shifts that entirely. It reduces emissions, supports pollinators, and keeps things aligned with the natural rhythm of the season.

Belle never uses pesticides, and only relies on organic fertilizers; practices she stands by in an effort to put the environment, pollinators, and the people enjoying her flowers first.

This Earth Week, we’re celebrating sustainability not just in what we build, but in how we live 🌱

Current garden status...
🌸 Overwintered Anemones are flowering now, with Spring transplants expected to bloom the first week of May
🌼 150 Ranunculus plants are close behind, expected to bloom in early June
☀️ Sweet Peas have been directly sowed this week
🌱 Yarrow, Poppies, Stock, Bells of Ireland, and more are queued up for transplanting next week

This Earth Week, each day we’re highlighting how sustainability shows up both on the job and at home for our team 🌎 ⚡For...
04/20/2026

This Earth Week, each day we’re highlighting how sustainability shows up both on the job and at home for our team 🌎 ⚡

For Zack, that connection is clear.

At Parker’s Old Time Farm in Canadice, NY, he manages his family's 100 acres using regenerative practices designed to work with the land, not against it.

🍄‍🟫 This week's farm activities include prepping logs for inoculating with Shiitake mushrooms, a process where mushroom spores are introduced into hardwood logs to grow food naturally over time with minimal inputs.

🍁 The farm also produces maple syrup using a wood-fired evaporator fueled by timber harvested directly from the property, creating a closed-loop system that reduces reliance on outside resources. Their 170 taps produced roughly 2,250 gallons of sap this year. This resulted in 50 gallons of finished syrup that can be purchased on their website.

🐖🐔🐐 Livestock plays an important role as well, naturally returning nutrients to the soil through manure, helping build soil health and reducing the need for synthetic fertilizers. It’s a practical example of nutrient cycling, one of the core principles of regenerative agriculture.

All of these efforts contribute to a more resilient, local food system. The goal is reducing transportation emissions, improving soil quality, and supporting long-term sustainability.

♻️ That same mindset carries into Zack’s work, where he helps install geothermal heat pumps across Western New York, reducing carbon emissions and supporting the transition to clean energy.

Whether it’s at home or on a job site, the goal is the same: build systems that last, reduce impact, and take care of the Earth.

Address

7288 Rush Lima Road
Honeoye Falls, NY
14472

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+15859357186

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