Culture & Design

How the Rich Can Escape America's Unreliable Power Grid

When Wim Coekaerts built his dream home, he decided to bypass the local utility and engineer his own microgrid.

Wim Coekaerts

Wim Coekaerts

Photographer: Kelsey McClellan for Bloomberg Green

When Wim Coekaerts bought a hillside lot to build his California dream house, there was an old horse barn, a grove of olive trees and lovely views of Silicon Valley. But there was no electricity, and the nearest utility pole to his bucolic acre was 550 feet away.

The town of Woodside requires new homes without utility service to pay for wires to be buried underground. Coekaerts faced a choice: pay PG&E Corp. roughly $100,000 for engineering work and foot the enormous additional cost of the trenching, or engineer a more personal fix.