Treasury Winery Estates

Spanning over 500 luscious acres in San Luis Obispo County, Treasury Winery Estates’ vineyards are located in Californias’ coastal mountain range. This project included installation of solar panels over the rooftops of the wine storage and grape crushing facilities. The winery received a new roof in the process of the solar installation. This cost was included as part of the installation. The installation spreads across three roof areas and interconnects to two PG&E Net Meters.

Las Vegas Water Pollution Control Facility

Bombard teamed with JMA Architecture Studios, JBA Electrical Engineers and Martin Harris Construction to engineer, procure, and construct a 3.5 Megawatt AC solar PV power plant at the City of Las Vegas Water Pollution Control Facility. The solar power system is located on 18 plus acres of land owned by the City of Las Vegas.

This 3.5 Megawatt system will use 15,162 Trina 230 watt PV modules and zero degree single-axis trackers, along with SMA Sunny Central 500HE inverters. Other site improvements included fencing and access gates, a new trail along the wash separating theproject site from the WPCF, a perimeter road system, site grading, and provisions for communication with the existing plant supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) system.

This project also includes an equipment building which provides the formal entrance to the facility and serves as a highly visible demonstration of the City’s commitment to renewable energy.

Oshman Family JCC

The many challenges presented by this project were overcome with Trinasmart technology powered by Tigo Energy, which improves the project economics and expected generation. By clamping voltage and increasing string length from the traditional 14 modules to 18 modules, the project used 27 fewer strings, 3 fewer combiner boxes, and 13,500 feet less wire.

Meridian Center Business Park

The project began in 2009 because of energy consumption that year. The rates were so high that the building complex tried to become more efficient. They changed the lighting and HVAC systems, and are now one of the more energy efficiency business parks in the state. Initially, they believed that a solar system would be too expensive. But upon analysis, the principals realized that the energy cost-savings, along with federal and state incentives, made the system installation a great investment. Since then, the business park has spun off a PPA company that is involved in an additional 5MW of projects.

Park Villas Rooftop

The Park Villas Rooftop is the largest Multi-family Affordable Solar Housing (MASH) project in California and will generate 775,000 KWH of electricity annually, enough to power 144 housing units and property common areas. In addition to supplying solar energy to the families living in Park Villas, Everyday Energy provided solar installation training to residents interested in becoming solar installation assistants. As a result of this training, Everyday Energy hired 3 course participants to work as solar assistants on their installation team.

Hawke Pointe Golf Course

The owners of Hawk Pointe Golf Club seek to make their course the most environmentally-friendly golf course in the country. In addition to powering course facilities with clean solar power, Hawk Pointe has also invested in a system that reclaims and treats wastewater to supply the significant volumes of water required to irrigate the course. Solar was chosen as the clean energy source because peak energy demand on the golf course coincides with peak energy production from solar.

Copper Mountain III

Situated on about 1,400 acres of land, Copper Mountain Solar III taps into the intense desert sun in Boulder City, Nevada, to produce clean energy and a stronger local economy. Copper Mountain Solar III is the third stage in the landmark Copper Mountain Solar complex, one of the largest photovoltaic solar facilities in the U.S.

The 345MW facility generates enough electricity to power about 89,000 homes. Copper Mountain Solar III supported the Boulder City economy by creating around 500 construction jobs and four full-time positions. The facility also generates state and local revenue through the sale of clean energy to the Southern California Public Power Authority.

Colorado State University

When Colorado State University decided to develop a ground-mounted solar power system at their Foothills campus, leading PV developer Fotowatio Renewable Ventures (FRV) selected Trina Solar’s multi-crystalline 230W modules. The installation is expected to generate annually over three and half million kilowatthours of electricity, satisfying over 10% of the campus’ electricity needs.