Net zero isn't a feature we bolt on. It's the result of a home designed to need very little, generate its own, and store what it doesn't use — with every system chosen to be quiet, reliable, and out of sight. Here is how the pieces fit together.
Power made on-site, in whatever form the home and site call for.
We size and place solar to the architecture, not the other way around — roof-mounted where the planes suit it, ground-mounted arrays where the land allows, or solar shingles where a clean roofline matters most. The aim is a system that produces what the home needs across the year while reading as part of the house, not an attachment to it.
Sun banked for when you need it — including when the grid is down.
On-site batteries hold the day's surplus for evening use and carry essential circuits through an outage automatically, with no generator to start and no fuel to store. Capacity is matched to how the household actually lives, so the home stays comfortable and running on its own terms.
An all-electric home, wired with intention from the first drawing.
Heating, cooling, hot water, cooking, and vehicle charging all run on a single, clean electrical backbone — planned for the loads of today and the ones coming next. Circuits are organized so solar, storage, and the grid hand off seamlessly, and so the home is genuinely EV-ready rather than EV-adaptable later.
The ground itself doing the quiet work of heating and cooling.
On suitable sites, a ground-source heat pump exchanges heat with the stable temperature below the surface — exceptionally efficient, nearly silent, and entirely out of view. We evaluate it home by home, recommending it only where the geology and the build make it the right long-term choice.
Each system is capable on its own. Together, designed and commissioned as one, they make a home that can carry itself — comfortable, resilient, and largely independent of forces outside its walls, for as long as the house stands.
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