Coverage
Sub-Zero Repair in Orange Park, FL
The Club Continental and River Road riverfront holds some of Clay County’s oldest luxury
kitchens — aging 500 and 600 series units that are exactly our specialty.
We repair Sub-Zero® units throughout Orange Park, including the Club Continental and River
Road riverfront estates in Clay County. The older stock here runs on 500 and 600 series units
whose seals, boards, and fans are at end-of-run. Most repairs run $250 to $1,100, and we are the
shop that actually crosses the river.
For Sub-Zero repair across Fleming Island, Pace Island and the Orange Park riverfront, call (904) 892-7163 or Book online.
Sub-Zero Fleming Island · Fleming Island, FL 32003 · (904) 892-7163
· online booking available · Updated June 13, 2026
Up front
Straight answers for Orange Park
Who repairs Sub-Zero in Orange Park?
Sub-Zero Fleming Island serves Orange Park 32073 and the Club Continental riverfront from the Clay
County side of the St. Johns, with phone booking at
(904) 892-7163 and an external online
scheduling page. Because we are based here, your call is the route, not a reluctant trip across
the river.
What does a service call cost?
A visit puts a tech in front of the unit to diagnose the fault, document it, and hand you a firm
repair number before any part goes in. Most Orange Park repairs land between $250 and $1,100, and
the diagnosis fee folds into the job once you approve it.
What if the unit is decades old?
Age alone does not mean replace. On the older riverfront stock, a fan, thermistor, board, or seal
brings a sound cabinet back for a fraction of a new built-in. We only frame repair-versus-replace
when a refrigerant leak meets a scarce part, and even then we give you the numbers, not a push.
One call, one tech, straight answers.
The riverfront
Why Orange Park is a different repair map
Orange Park is not one kind of house. The riverfront estates skew older and luxury-built; the
rest of town runs more mid-market. For Sub-Zero work, the riverfront is where the calls
concentrate, and the stock there shapes what we carry.
Diagnosis
What goes wrong on the older stock
The riverfront’s aging units fail in predictable ways, and the symptoms sort cleanly once
you have seen enough of them. This is the quick map we work from on an Orange Park call.
Door seals are the cheapest, highest-value fix on this stock — the
door gasket page explains why — and a 600 reading
"--" is covered on the 600 series page.
Keep or replace
Repair-or-replace on aging riverfront stock
The riverfront's older 500 and 600 series cabinets prompt the question more than anywhere on
our route: keep the old unit, or start over? We answer it with the unit's condition, not its
birthday. This is the framework we walk through on a River Road or Club Continental kitchen.
The full economics, including how board scarcity tips the math, sit on the
600 series page, and the seal case is made on the
door gasket page.
Facts that travel
Orange Park facts worth saving
- Clay County local: we are based on this side of the St. Johns, so Orange Park is the route, not a detour.
- 500 & 600 series: the units that fill most older Club Continental and River Road kitchens.
- $150–$450: a door gasket replacement — the lowest-cost, highest-value repair on aging stock.
- $250–$1,100: the lane most Orange Park repairs land in once diagnosed.
- Repair-first: age alone rarely justifies replacement on a sound cabinet.
Local notes
The river, the oaks, and old kitchens
The St. Johns shapes the work here much as Doctors Lake does on the Fleming Island side.
Riverfront air keeps Club Continental and River Road kitchens humid year-round, which hardens
door seals well ahead of schedule and makes compressors run longer to hold temperature. The
mature oak canopy over many of these lots drops debris that loads condenser coils fast, so the
vacuum condenser warning and EC50 codes turn up more than the manuals imply.
Age is the other half of the story. The riverfront estates were built and remodeled across the
1970s through the 2000s, so a large share of the Sub-Zero units there are original 500 and 600
series cabinets at the end of their first long run — boards aging, seals done, fans worn.
That clustering, plus Northeast Florida’s storm-season surges, is why we keep common parts
on the truck and why a fresh gasket so often brings an old unit’s run times and power bill
back to earth.
Case notes
Diagnostic case notes from the riverfront
These are educational diagnostic scenarios based on common Orange Park calls — composites,
not individual customers — to show how a riverfront symptom gets sorted.
River Road: the unit that never rested
A 600 series in an older riverfront kitchen ran nearly nonstop and still drifted warm. The
condenser was packed with oak debris and the fresh-food gasket had hardened along the hinge
side. Cleaning the coil and replacing the seal cut the run time sharply and brought the cabinet
back to 38°F — no board, no sealed-system work.
Club Continental area: the double-dash display
A 600 series on the riverfront dropped its display to "--" and lost temperature accuracy. The
EEPROM on the control board had corrupted, a known fault on these units. We confirmed the exact
model, priced a new board against a rebuilt one, and the owner chose the rebuilt path —
full control restored at the lower number.
Questions
Orange Park Sub-Zero questions
Do you cover the Club Continental and River Road riverfront in Orange Park?
Yes — the older riverfront stretch is one of our regular runs. The estates along River Road near Club Continental hold some of the oldest luxury kitchens in Clay County, and the 500 and 600 series units in them are exactly what we specialize in. We treat that corridor as home territory, not a one-off trip across the county line.
Why do mainland Jacksonville companies skip Clay County for these brands?
Routing math, mostly. A Jacksonville-based shop fills its day on the Beaches and Southside, and a Sub-Zero call across the river in Orange Park is the inconvenient outlier that gets a vague window next week. We built around that gap, so a riverfront call here is the route, not the detour. Showing up is the whole positioning.
My Orange Park home is older. Are parts for a 1990s Sub-Zero still around?
For most of them, yes. The 500 and 600 series units common in older Orange Park kitchens still have fans, thermistors, gaskets, and many boards available, and we carry the parts they fail on most. A genuinely scarce board we source and quote before ordering, and we price a rebuilt option where one exists rather than steer you toward replacement.
Is it worth repairing an older Sub-Zero in a River Road home rather than replacing it?
Usually yes, and we answer it with numbers. A sound cabinet with a failed fan, thermistor, or seal costs a fraction of a new built-in, and these units have years left when the sealed system is healthy. The one real exception is a refrigerant leak paired with a scarce board, where we lay out repair-versus-replace figures and let you choose.
How quickly can you get to an Orange Park address?
Because we are on the Clay County side of the river, an Orange Park call does not wait behind a line of Jacksonville jobs. We schedule within the week and move a fully warm unit up the list. Tell us at booking whether the cabinet has stopped cooling entirely and we will weigh the urgency accordingly.
The oak canopy over my River Road lot keeps dropping debris on the unit. Does that really matter?
It matters more here than almost anywhere. The mature oaks over the older Club Continental and River Road lots shed pollen, leaf litter, and fine debris that the condenser coil pulls in, and a choked coil sheds less heat, runs the compressor longer, and triggers the vacuum condenser warning on a 600 or an EC50 on a BI. Twice-yearly coil cleaning is the cheap defense, and on a shaded riverfront lot it is closer to required than optional.
My Orange Park home was on a private well before city water. Could that explain stained ice?
Yes. Some older properties around the St. Johns riverfront ran on private wells, and well water near the river can carry iron and sulfur that stain ice rust-colored and leave a sulfur odor, separate from the calcium scale of the city supply. We trace which source is feeding the ice maker, treat the staining at the supply, and clear the affected fill components rather than just swapping the filter and hoping.
Do you take Orange Park calls outside the riverfront, or only the luxury estates?
We take Sub-Zero work anywhere in Orange Park 32073. The riverfront is where the calls concentrate because that is where the older luxury kitchens are, but a BI built-in or a wine unit in a newer Orange Park subdivision is just as much our lane. The brand is the focus, not the address, and being Clay County based means none of those calls is a reluctant trip across the river.
All service
More Sub-Zero help in Clay County
Get on this week's route
Tell us the model and the symptom, and we'll bring the likely parts on the first visit —
Fleming Island to the Orange Park riverfront.
(904) 892-7163 — Monday–Friday, 8:00 am–6:00 pm