Ponte Vedra sits on a narrow ribbon of Atlantic coast, with the ocean and its dunes on one
side and the Guana marsh and the Intracoastal
on the other. That geography is the whole story here. When a hurricane runs up the coast,
surge takes the dunes and the beachfront first, and inland lots near the marsh see flooding
and downed trees. Erosion, not river flooding, is the marquee risk on these beaches.
Most of Ponte Vedra Beach and Palm Valley is served by
Beaches Energy, the community-owned utility
run out of Jacksonville Beach, rather than a large investor-owned company. It is a small
system covering a stretch of barrier coast, which is exactly the kind of grid that takes a
direct hit hard.
These are large homes: golf communities like Sawgrass and Marsh Landing, oceanfront estates,
and Palm Valley properties out toward the water. Big square footage and multiple AC systems
mean a lot to power, which is why whole-home and liquid-cooled standby units are common in
this market rather than the small backup kits you see elsewhere.
A permanently installed standby generator handles all of it on its own. It senses the outage,
switches over in seconds, and runs for as long as the grid stays down, which on a battered
barrier coast can mean days.
See how installation works →