A different approach

Solar that belongs
on the land.

Most solar on residential properties is bolted onto a roof or staked into a lawn. It works, but it looks installed rather than designed.

Eden & Dane integrates solar at the design phase. Greenhouses with translucent solar glass. Coops and accessory structures with PV-clad roofs. Pergolas that shade in summer and harvest in winter. Irrigation pumps and water features powered entirely off-grid.

The result is a property that quietly generates a meaningful share of its own energy while looking more thoughtful, not less.

For the engineering and installation itself, we partner with vetted solar specialists. Our role is the design integration. Their role is the wiring and inspection. Yours is to enjoy a property that does more of its own work each year.

Where solar fits

Four integrations that work especially well.

01  Greenhouses

Glass that produces.

Modern transparent solar glass turns a greenhouse roof into both growing space and energy source. The plants get the light they need, the structure powers itself, and the design reads as architecture rather than utility.

02  Pergolas & shade

Shade that pays.

Pergolas with integrated PV panels overhead. Shade in summer when you need it, energy production year-round, and a structure that anchors a gathering space without looking industrial.

03  Accessory structures

Coops, sheds & pump houses.

Chicken coops, garden sheds, and irrigation pump enclosures with solar-clad roofs. Each one becomes a small, self-sufficient node on the property that does not draw from grid power.

04  Water & irrigation

Pumps that run themselves.

Solar-powered irrigation pumps, fountain recirculation, rainwater systems, and remote zone watering. The water moves on the property's own terms, on the property's own energy.

The most beautiful energy system is the one you have to point out to your guests because they did not notice it was there.
Dane Hoover, Founder
Why integrate at design

Three reasons we do it this way.

i  Aesthetic

It looks designed, not installed.

Solar integrated at the design phase reads as intentional architecture. Solar added later almost always reads as compromise. The difference between the two on a property's value is significant.

ii  Financial

Tax credits, properly captured.

Federal solar tax credits, state-level incentives, and net metering arrangements vary by jurisdiction. We map the financial pathway during the design phase so you do not leave money on the table at install.

iii  Operational

A property that does its own work.

Solar on accessory structures means irrigation runs, gates open, water features circulate, and lighting comes on without you having to think about utility bills or grid reliability. Quiet independence at the property level.

Begin

Energy that belongs
on the land.

Begin with a 15-minute discovery call. We will talk about your property, your goals, and where solar might actually belong in the design rather than on top of it.

Book your discovery call