Workers are expected to complete the installation today of a solar panel array atop the westside roof of Stan's Harley Davidson on West Saile Drive.
The total cost of the project, which covers more than 10,000 square feet of roof, is $574,000 with the cost partially financed by state and federal tax credits.
The panels will product enough electricity to run all of Stan's operations. The power generated from the panels is first shipped to National Grid. NG then sells the power back to Stan's at a reduced rate.
That should mean about a 50-percent cost savings each month for the Harley dealership.
"We won't know, probably, until the first of the year and it's up and going what it's actually doing," said owner Darryl Horzempa.
Horzempa decided to pursue the project after attending a Solarize Genesee County workshop in January hosted by the Genesee County Economic Development Center (though GCEDC was not involved in the project otherwise).
"I'm interested in recycling and things like that, so it was a natural thing to me to help take care of the environment," Horzempa said.
Rochester-based Arista Power won the contract for the solar panel installation.
Buffalo - Batavia - Rochester
Buffalo - Batavia - Rochester rank in the top 5 most cloudy cities in the whole USA.
Good luck.
"I'm interested in recycling
"I'm interested in recycling and things like that, so it was a natural thing to me to help take care of the environment," Horzemea said.........................
Would he be saving the environment with out tax credits........
I didn't know this!
I didn't know this!
http://www.currentresults.com/Weather-Extremes/US/cloudiest-cities.php
Solar panels work in overcast
Solar panels work in overcast days - ambient light is all they take to generate power, rather than direct sunlight. The sunnier the better, of course, but this is a great investment that generations will benefit from for years to come!
I am fine with solar panels,
I am fine with solar panels, wind mills, geo projects etc. Just as long as the home or business doesn't finance it with tax dollars. If it is economically viable, it will stand on it's own in the free market.