WHITE PAPER: The 10X Return on EV Make-Ready Infrastructure in Central Chicago Condos
What if a $1,000 infrastructure investment could add $7,000 to $12,000 in resale value to your Chicago condo?
In our latest white paper, we analyze central Chicago condominium data and demonstrate how EV make-ready infrastructure can generate a 7x to 15x return on investment. With most older buildings lacking charging capacity and buyer demand rising, EV readiness is quickly becoming a measurable value differentiator. If your building has deeded garage parking, the financial case may be stronger than you think. Read the full analysis to see the numbers.
WHITE PAPER: Illinois EV Charging Law and HOA Legal Obligations in Chicago
Illinois’ new EV Charging Act gives condo owners and tenants the right to install chargers. Are HOAs prepared? This guide explains what boards must do, what owners can expect, and how Chicago associations can plan for equitable and future-ready EV infrastructure.
WHITE PAPER: How HOA Boards Can Use the Initial EV Infrastructure Assessment Checklist
Are we actually ready for EV charging, or just talking about it?
This quick-read checklist helps HOA boards identify what they already know about their building and what gaps could delay or increase the cost of EV infrastructure. The more boxes you can check today, the faster and more confidently your association can move from questions to a workable EV charging strategy.
WHITE PAPER: Tired of Public EV Charging?
Tired of spending extra time and money charging your EV at public stations? This short guide shows Chicago condo residents how to work with their HOA to explore in-building EV charging, starting with a practical feasibility review that can unlock home charging while strengthening long-term property value.
WHITE PAPER: Cost Analysis for EV Make-Ready Infrastructure
This white paper explains how Chicago condominium associations can implement EV make-ready electrical infrastructure in large parking garages at a predictable cost of approximately $800 to $1,000 per space. It defines make-ready infrastructure using shared charging zones, shows how association-funded upgrades create equitable future charger installation costs for all residents, and breaks down engineering, construction, and permitting expenses under real Chicago retrofit conditions. The paper also explains how electrical capacity and load-managed Level 2 charging influence cost and scalability, helping boards understand why early planning avoids higher future retrofits and uneven owner costs.