Are you confident that your old furnace can meet the demands of your home during the winter months? Make sure by letting our clean, screened, trained and timely heating techs perform expert Lincoln Village heating services. Call (614) 388-9241 before there’s a problem.
Heating in Lincoln Village, OH
When your furnace breaks down, the last thing you want to worry about is dealing with an unprofessional HVAC repair company. At CJS Heating & Air, everything we do is about you.
From arriving on time to providing you with affordable heating solutions, our staff always puts your needs and comfort as our number one priority. We can also help to prevent these issues from ever occurring through the use of our furnace maintenance solutions. This service includes furnace cleaning, furnace tune up, changing of furnace air filters, and any other heating service you may need. So if you want the highest quality furnace solutions for your home, then let our company provide you with the quality that you deserve.
Best Choice for Heating in Lincoln Village
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation President and CEO Murray Lincoln had aspired to create a suburban “village” since the early 1940s. Lincoln, as the head of what would become Nationwide Insurance from 1920 to 1948, initiated work on the Lincoln Village project in the early 1950s with the support of the U.S. Cooperative Movement. Lincoln was able to “sell” the Cooperative ideology to Ohio individual farmers, and viewed co-ops as “an answer to Communism in Europe and Asia, and as a balance wheel against unfettered private enterprise in the U.S.”[citation needed] After founding several co-op and non co-op enterprises, Lincoln was able to fund the development of Lincoln Village with assets made from these corporations (which totaled $133,510,000).[citation needed] Lincoln’s People’s Development Corporation was formed to build Lincoln Village. The price of this project was about $30,000,000 USD.[citation needed] The plan for Lincoln Village included 9 miles (14 km) of streets, sewers, a pumping station, and a million-gallon water pump. Lincoln Village was built for 10,000 inhabitants, and was set around a 20-acre (8.1 ha) civic center.[citation needed] In 1953, bulldozers completed grading of 1,270 acres (510 ha) of farmland in western Columbus for the construction of Lincoln Village, with churches, a school, wooded park, playgrounds, and a library. A shopping center would also be built. Housing in the village was to include apartment buildings and single family homes priced between $9,000 to $16,000.