SolarCity, First Solar to appear on Extreme Makeover show

FOSTER CITY, CALIFORNIA - A sleek, new solar system donated by SolarCity and First Solar will be featured in an upcoming episode of “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition,” the two companies announced.

The episode, filmed in Fresno, Calif., features Mary Ann Riojas and her family, and will air this Sunday night, March 8, at 8 p.m. PT/ 7 p.m. MT, and 8 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. CT, on ABC stations nationwide.

In cooperation with De Young Properties of Fresno, First Solar donated 66 solar modules, and SolarCity donated the installation and labor, mounting system and other components, and its SolarGuard monitoring service to the project. Thirty-five of SolarCityÂ’s Fresno-based employees joined hundreds of others to volunteer for the whirlwind, six-day building effort in January.

The entire solar system and installation, valued at approximately $40,000, is expected to supply renewable electricity for 25 years or more. SolarCity estimates the solar system will offset more than half the Riojas familyÂ’s electricity use, and save them tens of thousands of dollars over its lifetime.

Mary Ann Riojas has spent much of her life helping others. Riojas works at the local housing authority, helping struggling families find housing in the community. She has also worked as a national ambassador for the Easter Seals program, inspiring many to overcome adversity.

Mary Anne was born with a disability that requires her to use a wheelchair. The “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” team designed and built a house for Mary Anne that accommodates her disability, includes room for her four children, and showcases some of the best money-saving, green building options available.

In addition to the solar system, the house qualifies as GreenPoint Rated, meaning it is more than 35 percent more energy-efficient than CaliforniaÂ’s high standards.

The house has a high-quality ventilation system, blown-in insulation, dual-paned windows, a tank-less water heater, and fixtures designed to save water.

Related News

downed power lines

Can the Electricity Industry Seize Its Resilience Moment?

WASHINGTON - When operators of Duke Energy's control room in Raleigh, North Carolina wait for a hurricane, the mood is often calm in the hours leading up to the storm.

“Things are usually fairly quiet before the activity starts,” said Mark Goettsch, the systems operations manager at Duke. “We’re anxiously awaiting the first operation and the first event. Once that begins, you get into storm mode.”

Then begins a “frenzied pace” that can last for days — like when Hurricane Florence parked over Duke’s service territory in September.

When an event like Florence hits, all eyes are on transmission and distribution. Where it’s…

READ MORE
europe renewables

Europe's Renewables Are Crowding Out Gas as Coal Phase-Out Slows

READ MORE

california solar power

California just made more clean energy than it needed

READ MORE

Ukraine's parliament backs amendments to electricity market law

READ MORE

powerline worker

Canada in top 10 for hydropower jobs, but doesn't rank on other renewables

READ MORE