Critical-Power Solar Construction in NJ: Zero-Outage Tie-In Methods
Critical-Power Solar Construction in NJ: Zero-Outage Tie-In Methods
For most New Jersey commercial properties, solar construction is non-disruptive — we sequence rooftop work zone-by-zone and schedule the AC tie-in for a weekend. But for critical-power facilities — hospitals, manufacturing facilities with process power continuity requirements, cold storage with refrigeration, data centers — even a 30-second utility outage is unacceptable. This post explains how parallel transformer tie-ins eliminate any solar-related outage at NJ critical-power sites.
What Is a Standard AC Tie-In?
In a typical commercial solar project, the AC tie-in is when the solar inverters connect into your facility’s main electrical service. The standard method:
- De-energize the main service panel briefly
- Install a backfeed breaker (or replace the main breaker)
- Connect solar inverter output to the breaker
- Re-energize the service
For most facilities, this is scheduled for a weekend or off-shift window. Total facility outage: 30 minutes to 4 hours depending on complexity.
Why Critical-Power Facilities Can’t Use Standard Tie-Ins
Hospitals, surgical centers, manufacturing facilities with GxP requirements, cold storage with high-value perishables, and data centers cannot tolerate any utility outage. Reasons:
- Patient care equipment requires continuous power
- Pharmaceutical manufacturing process power continuity is regulated by FDA
- Cold storage even briefly losing refrigeration risks inventory damage
- Data center server downtime has direct revenue consequences
- Joint Commission accreditation for hospitals requires documented power continuity
The Parallel Transformer Tie-In Method
For critical-power NJ facilities, we engineer a parallel transformer tie-in:
- Pre-construction: Install a second transformer to handle the solar contribution. The existing service transformer stays in place serving the facility.
- Solar installation phase: Solar inverters connect to the new transformer’s secondary side. The new transformer is energized from the utility primary feed but its secondary is isolated from the facility load.
- Switchover phase: During a planned maintenance window (often midnight to 4 AM), the secondary side of the new transformer is paralleled with the existing service. The two transformers share load momentarily.
- Verification phase: Load distribution is verified, secondary impedance is checked, and the configuration is documented.
- Production phase: Both transformers serve the facility going forward. Solar feeds in through the new transformer; facility load is split between them.
The key engineering principle: at no point during construction is the facility load disconnected from utility power. The facility never experiences an outage.
What This Adds to Project Cost
Parallel transformer tie-ins add $30,000 to $80,000 to a typical commercial solar project, depending on transformer sizing and existing infrastructure. The cost components:
- Second transformer (utility-grade): $15,000 to $40,000
- Additional electrical disconnects and metering: $5,000 to $15,000
- Utility coordination for parallel operation: $5,000 to $15,000
- Extended engineering and PE-stamped switching plan: $5,000 to $10,000
For a $400,000 commercial solar project at a hospital or pharmaceutical manufacturer, the parallel tie-in adds 7-20% to total cost — but it’s non-negotiable for facilities where downtime has real consequences.
NJ Utility Coordination for Parallel Tie-Ins
All four major NJ utilities (PSE&G, JCP&L, Atlantic City Electric, Rockland) support parallel transformer solar interconnections. The application process is similar to standard Level 2 but includes additional engineering review for the parallel operation. Add 2-4 weeks to typical interconnection timeline.
Critical-Power Facilities We’ve Engineered For
Healthcare facilities, pharmaceutical manufacturing, cold storage with mission-critical refrigeration, and data centers all benefit from zero-outage solar construction. Even non-critical commercial properties sometimes elect parallel tie-ins for risk-aversion or insurance reasons.
If your NJ commercial facility has power continuity requirements, get a feasibility review that includes parallel tie-in design. Our Commercial Solar EPC service includes critical-power coordination as a standard option for facilities that require it.
LandAir Energy · 2050 Fairfax Avenue, Cherry Hill, NJ · 856-702-3721
Last updated: May 12, 2026
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