There is no better feeling on a January morning in Wisconsin than walking on a warm floor. In-floor radiant heat delivers even, comfortable warmth from the ground up, eliminates cold spots, and runs whisper quiet without blowing dust around. Once you have lived with it, regular forced-air heat feels primitive.
Doro Plumbing installs and services hydronic in-floor radiant heat systems for homes across Washington, Dodge, Ozaukee, Waukesha, and Jefferson counties. We work with hot water (boiler-driven) systems only. We do not install or service electric radiant systems. Hydronic radiant is what makes sense for whole-home and whole-room applications, and it is what we know.
In-floor radiant is a fantastic match for:
It is not always the right answer. Adding radiant to a finished home with existing heat is more invasive than it sounds. We will tell you straight when it makes sense and when it does not.
Hydronic radiant heat works by circulating warm water through tubing embedded in or under the floor. The floor itself becomes a giant low-temperature radiator. Because the entire floor is doing the heating, the water temperature is much lower than what is needed for baseboard or radiators, which makes the system efficient and comfortable.
The major components:
We handle radiant tubing installation in three primary ways:
Slab-on-grade: tubing is fastened to insulation and rebar before concrete is poured. The cleanest, most efficient installation. Standard for new basements, garage floors, and slab construction.
Staple-up: tubing is stapled to the underside of the subfloor between joists, with insulation below to direct heat upward. Works for retrofits in homes with accessible basements or crawl spaces.
Plate or panel systems: aluminum plates clipped to joists with tubing channeled through, providing better heat transfer than bare staple-up. Slightly more expensive but more efficient.
The right choice depends on whether the project is new construction or retrofit, the floor finish you want, and your budget.
Radiant heat works best with floor coverings that conduct heat well:
If you have a specific floor finish in mind, talk to us early in the planning process so we can size the system correctly for that material.
Existing radiant systems need occasional service. We handle:
For leaks within the slab itself, repair is more involved and requires careful planning. We work through the diagnosis and repair plan with you so you understand the scope and the options before any concrete work happens.
If you are planning a new build, an addition, or a basement finish and considering radiant, the time to call us is before construction. The system needs to be designed into the project, with insulation, slab thickness, manifold location, boiler sizing, and zone layout all considered together.
A two-page sketch and a 30-minute conversation early on saves headaches later.
Doro Plumbing · (262) 229-5632 · Hartford, WI
Other services we offer that often go hand-in-hand with this one.
We offer this service across Hartford and the surrounding southeast Wisconsin communities.