Panel Upgrade Experts has been featured in industry and media publications covering solar energy, residential electrification, and electrical infrastructure. These articles reflect ongoing shifts in how homes are designed, powered, and upgraded as energy demand continues to evolve.
Toronto Guardian
As electrical demand inside homes continues to grow, homeowners are beginning to approach upgrades differently. This article explores how projects like EV charging, heating systems, and solar are increasingly planned in stages rather than treated as isolated decisions.
Calgary Guardian
Many homes built in previous decades are now being pushed beyond their original electrical limits. This article outlines how increasing demand is exposing gaps in older infrastructure and why capacity is becoming a more common consideration in residential projects.
Green Building Canada
Alberta is entering a period of accelerated residential electrification, driven by rising electric vehicle adoption, cold climate heat pump incentives and sustained volatility in provincial electricity pricing.
Urban Splatter
Renovation culture tends to celebrate the visible: open staircases, sculptural lighting, seamless millwork, walls of glazing. Yet beneath the drywall, a quieter transformation is underway. Across North America, electrical panel upgrades are becoming a decisive factor in what homes can and cannot become.
Daily Civil
In Calgary, solar is no longer an experimental add on reserved for environmentally motivated homeowners. It is steadily becoming a construction consideration that affects structural detailing, electrical planning, roofing strategy, and long term asset value. For builders and contractors operating in Western Canada, photovoltaic integration is shifting from optional upgrade to expected capability.
UK Construction
Across North America and the United Kingdom, much of the residential building stock was constructed in periods when electrical demand looked very different from today. Homes built in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s were designed around modest appliance loads, limited air conditioning, and no anticipation of electric vehicle charging or large scale electrification.
Global Bioenergy
Public discussions about the clean energy transition usually revolve around large infrastructure projects. Wind farms stretching across open landscapes, hydroelectric dams supplying regional grids, and massive solar installations are often the most visible symbols of progress. These projects are undeniably important for reducing emissions from electricity generation.
The Dedicated House
Over the past few years, Canada has experienced a significant shift towards renewable energy, with solar power leading the way in popularity.
As homes continue to electrify, the role of electrical infrastructure is becoming more central to how upgrades are planned and implemented. From panel capacity to system integration, these factors are increasingly shaping what is possible in residential projects.
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