Ground Source Heat Pump Installation: Horizontal Collectors, Boreholes, Loop Sizing and Groundworks Requirements

Quick Answer: A ground source heat pump (GSHP) extracts heat from the ground via a buried loop of pipe (horizontal slinky or straight collector) or via vertical boreholes. Horizontal collectors require approximately 10× the floor area of the heated property in accessible land; a 10kW GSHP typically needs 400–700m of horizontal pipe (varying by soil type). Boreholes are 80–150m deep and require specialist drilling. The ground loop is filled with a water/glycol mix. GSHPs are more efficient than ASHPs (COP ~4–5 vs ~3–4) but have significantly higher installation costs due to groundworks.

Summary

Ground source heat pumps offer higher efficiency than air source because the ground maintains a stable temperature (10–12°C year-round in the UK) compared to air, which varies between -5°C in winter and 25°C in summer. However, the groundworks requirement makes GSHP installations significantly more expensive and disruptive than ASHP.

For groundworkers and heating engineers, GSHP installations are collaborative projects: the heating engineer designs and installs the heat pump, cylinder, and hydraulic system; the groundworker installs the ground collector (trenches for horizontal loops, boreholes for vertical loops). Both parties need to understand the interface between the ground loop and the indoor system.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: Ground Loop Sizing Rules of Thumb

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Ground Type Horizontal Pipe (m/kW of heat pump) Borehole Depth (m/kW of heat pump)
Dry sandy soil 50–70 m/kW 15–20 m/kW
Clay (moist) 40–55 m/kW 12–18 m/kW
Clay (saturated, below water table) 30–45 m/kW 10–15 m/kW
Rock (standard) N/A (usually borehole) 8–12 m/kW
Peat Poor — not recommended N/A

These are indicative figures. Proper ground loop sizing requires site-specific soil assessment.

Detailed Guidance

Site Assessment for Ground Loop

Horizontal collector suitability:

Vertical borehole suitability:

Horizontal Ground Loop Installation

Trench specification:

Pipe specification:

Backfill:

Manifold connections: The individual loop headers (flow and return from each trench) connect to a ground loop manifold in a manifold chamber near the house. The chamber must be accessible for flow balancing valves on each loop.

Pressure test: Before backfilling (and after), pressure test the ground loop to 1.5× operating pressure (minimum 6 bar) and hold for 60 minutes. Pressure drop indicates a pipe joint leak. Inspect all connections before backfill.

Glycol fill: After pressure testing, fill the ground loop with the water/glycol mix (typically 25% propylene glycol by volume — sufficient for -15°C freeze protection in UK ground temperatures). Connect to the indoor heat pump via insulated flow and return headers.

Vertical Borehole Installation

Vertical boreholes require specialist drilling equipment and should only be designed and installed by GSHPA-accredited contractors. The groundworker's role in a borehole installation is typically:

Borehole construction:

Multiple boreholes: Larger domestic or commercial GSHP systems may require 2–6 boreholes. Minimum borehole spacing is typically 5–8m to prevent long-term thermal depletion of the ground around the bore field.

Indoor GSHP System

The indoor GSHP unit is similar to an ASHP in its hydraulic connections: flow and return to the heating circuit, a DHW cylinder connection, and electrical supply. Key differences:

Legionella and DHW

Identical requirements to ASHP: DHW cylinder to be sized for the property (typically 200–300L for a domestic property); set point 50–55°C for normal operation; weekly pasteurisation to 60°C. A dedicated GSHP-compatible unvented cylinder with a direct coil (for higher flow temperatures) is the standard specification.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use an existing garden to install horizontal collectors after landscaping is complete?

Yes, but it is significantly more disruptive and expensive than installing collectors in an unlevel or pre-landscaped garden. Mature lawns can be reinstated; paving or patios must be removed, stored, and reinstated. Allow for this in the installation cost estimate. The additional cost may tip the economics in favour of vertical boreholes for landscaped gardens.

Can the ground loop be installed under a driveway or hardstanding?

Yes, but with caution. Ground loops under impermeable hardstandings (tarmac, concrete) can experience reduced performance because the hardstanding prevents rain from replenishing soil moisture. The loop under a hardstanding can also be harder to repair if a pipe fails. Where unavoidable, use pressure-class rated pipe and test rigorously before covering.

Do I need an Environment Agency licence for a domestic ground loop?

For most domestic ground source heat pump ground loops (horizontal or borehole), no abstraction licence is required. The de minimis threshold exempts most domestic GSHP ground loops. However, open-loop GSHP systems (which actually pump groundwater, use its heat, and return it to a different point) do require an abstraction licence. Confirm with the EA for any open-loop or water source heat pump installation.

Regulations & Standards