NTG
Silver Member
I'm interested in building a house and shop on some land. I have not contacted the power company yet as I wanted to get some advice on how to route the power into my property and if I have any options available to me. The entrance to my property is funnel shaped with about a 300' road leading into the gate. On my attachment, point 1 is where the end of the county road meets my private road, point 2 is where my private road leads into my property, point 3 is where my shop will be located and point 4 is where my house will be located. The distance between point 2 and point 4 is approximately 470 feet if the wire would be cheaper going that way first. My question is does it matter if I take power to the shop and then to the house, or do you have to go to the house first and then to the shop? The house will be around 1600 sq ft and no unique power needs. We'll have I guess "standard" HVAC, stove, water heater, dryer and well pump connections, so I guess 200A would do it. The shop won't be anything really unique either. It'll be about 1300 sq ft and I'll be running only 1 power tool at a time like a table saw or planer, or maybe 2 at a time like a dust collector while the tool is running. I would like to be able to run a 240v welder, but just a "standard" buzz box stick welder. It'll be just pretty much a "hobby grade" shop, not a commercial enterprise, so maybe a 100A deal? Maybe 40-60A would do it, I don't know. I *will* feed some stuff out to outdoor outlets, lights, etc for animals, coops, pens or whatever, but that probably won't be much of a draw. I'm a "one man show" so the odds of running anything much simultaneously that would overload the system is very doubtful. Ideally, I'd like to put a little utility building just inside my gate and then trench everything myself as I have time so I don't lose any more trees than I have to. If the power company brings the line in overhead, I think it's a 15-30' wide lane they have to have and I'd rather not cut that many trees down if I can help it. However, depending on how much they're willing to run for free versus what I have to pay for, that may sway that decision.
If anyone can look at my map and at the power company sheet and tell me what I'm looking at, I'd appreciate it. I'll answer any questions I can. I'm not planning on doing this work myself, I'll be hiring an electrician, I just wanted to educate myself as much as possible before approaching the power company. The older I get (translation, the grumpier LOL) the less I'm willing to take what a single employee of any company tells me as "the gospel". I'm certainly not going to argue with a rep from the utility company, I'd just like to be able to bounce ideas off them if they only see "one way to skin a cat" if you will. Thank you.

View attachment AP Install Rates.pdf

View attachment AP Install Rates.pdf