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You’re not looking for the cheapest bid. You’re looking for an electrical contractor in Gravesend, NY who shows up, does the work correctly, and doesn’t leave you with insurance headaches or failed inspections down the road.
That means proper permits filed with the city. It means a licensed electrician who actually knows Brooklyn’s building codes and how to navigate them. It means work that passes inspection the first time because it was done right from the start.
Whether you’re dealing with an aging electrical panel that can’t handle modern loads, knob-and-tube wiring that’s uninsurable, or you need your home ready for EV charging and smart home systems, the outcome is the same. Your electrical system works safely. Your insurance stays valid. Your property value stays protected.
We’re a licensed electrical contractor serving Gravesend, NY and the surrounding Brooklyn area. We handle residential and commercial electrical services with one priority: doing it right.
That means pulling permits when required. Following National Electrical Code and local Brooklyn regulations. Carrying proper insurance so you’re protected if something goes wrong.
Gravesend has a mix of older homes with outdated wiring and newer developments with modern electrical demands. We’ve worked in both. We know what it takes to upgrade a century-old brownstone safely and how to wire new construction for today’s electrical loads. You’re not getting a crew that disappears mid-project or leaves you to deal with the city on your own.
First, we come out and look at what you’re dealing with. We assess your current electrical system, identify code issues, and figure out what actually needs to happen. You get a clear estimate before any work starts.
If permits are required, we handle that. In New York, only a licensed electrical contractor can legally file and close electrical permits for most projects. We submit the paperwork, schedule inspections, and make sure everything is documented properly with the city.
Then we do the work. Panel upgrades, rewiring, new circuits, lighting installations, generator hookups, EV charging stations—whatever the project requires. Our licensed electricians follow code at every step because that’s what keeps you safe and keeps your insurance valid.
After the work is done, we handle the final inspection and permit closure. You’re not left chasing down paperwork or wondering if something was missed. The job is complete when the city signs off and your electrical system is functioning the way it should.
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When you hire a licensed electrical contractor in Gravesend, NY, you’re getting more than just someone who knows how to wire a circuit. You’re getting someone who can legally pull permits, who carries proper insurance, and who has thousands of hours of training and certification.
For residential work, that means panel upgrades that can handle modern electrical loads—heat pumps, electric vehicle charging, smart home systems, and high-efficiency appliances all running at once. It means rewiring older homes safely, replacing outdated knob-and-tube systems that insurance companies won’t cover, and installing whole-home generators that actually work when the power goes out.
For commercial and industrial clients in Gravesend, it means tenant fit-outs, service upgrades, equipment installations, and ongoing maintenance that keeps your business running and up to code. Many commercial properties in Brooklyn have electrical systems that were modified multiple times over the years without proper oversight. We straighten that out.
Brooklyn’s building department requires permits for most electrical work. If you’re caught doing unpermitted work, you’re looking at fines, stop-work orders, and potential insurance claim denials if something goes wrong. A certified electrical contractor handles that process correctly so you don’t end up with violations or safety hazards.
Yes, and here’s why it matters. Electrical permits exist to make sure your work meets safety standards that protect you and your property. In New York, most electrical projects require a permit, and only a licensed electrical contractor can legally file them.
If you skip permits, you’re risking fines and stop-work orders if the city finds out. Worse, if you ever have an electrical fire or other incident, your insurance company can deny your claim entirely if they discover unpermitted work. That’s not a scare tactic—it’s how insurance policies are written.
Permits also protect you during a home sale. Buyers and their inspectors will ask about electrical work, and if you can’t show proper permits and sign-offs, you’ll either need to get the work redone or lose the sale. It’s easier to do it right the first time.
Panel upgrades are one of the most common electrical projects we handle in Gravesend, and they’re necessary when your current panel can’t handle modern electrical demands. If you’re adding EV charging, upgrading to electric heat, or just tripping breakers constantly, your panel is likely undersized.
The process starts with an assessment of your current service and what you actually need. Most older homes in Brooklyn have 60 or 100-amp service, but modern homes with electric appliances, HVAC systems, and EV chargers need 200 amps or more. We calculate your load requirements and size the new panel correctly.
Then we coordinate with the utility company and the city. The utility handles the service upgrade outside your home. We handle everything inside—installing the new panel, rewiring circuits as needed, and making sure everything is grounded and code-compliant. The whole process requires permits and inspections, which we manage from start to finish. You end up with a system that can handle your actual electrical needs without constant breaker trips or fire hazards.
Knob-and-tube wiring was standard in New York City from the 1880s through the 1940s, so if your Gravesend home was built during that period and hasn’t been fully rewired, there’s a good chance it’s still there. You’ll typically find it in unfinished basements, attics, and behind walls.
The wiring looks distinct—individual wires run separately through ceramic knobs and tubes rather than bundled together in modern cable. The bigger issue is that knob-and-tube lacks a ground wire, which is critical for safety. It also wasn’t designed to handle the electrical loads of modern homes.
Many insurance companies in New York refuse to insure homes with active knob-and-tube wiring because of fire risk. Even if your current insurer covers it, you’ll have trouble switching providers or selling your home. The solution is a full rewire, which means running new cable throughout the house and bringing everything up to current code. It’s not a small project, but it’s necessary if you want your home to be safe and insurable.
Installing a Level 2 EV charging station at your Gravesend home requires more than just plugging something into an outlet. You need a dedicated 240-volt circuit, which means running new wiring from your electrical panel to wherever you’re parking your vehicle.
First, we assess whether your current panel can handle the additional load. A Level 2 charger typically draws 30 to 50 amps, which is significant. If your panel is already maxed out or undersized, you’ll need an upgrade before we can add the charging circuit.
Once the panel is ready, we install the circuit, mount the charging station, and make sure everything is properly grounded and code-compliant. Many local jurisdictions now mandate EV readiness in new construction, and that trend is expanding. Getting your home set up now means you’re ready for the future, and it’s a selling point if you ever list the property. The whole process requires permits and inspection, which we handle as part of the installation.
It depends entirely on the scope of work and whether permits are involved. A simple repair or outlet installation might take a few hours. A panel upgrade typically takes one to two days of actual work, but the timeline also includes permit approval and scheduling inspections with the city.
Larger projects like whole-home rewiring can take a week or more, depending on the size of the property and how much access we have to existing wiring. If you’re doing a gut renovation, the electrical work happens in phases—rough-in wiring first, then final installations after walls are closed and finished.
The permit process in Brooklyn adds time, but it’s not optional. We submit applications as soon as the project starts, and we schedule inspections as work progresses. Trying to skip permits to save time is a mistake—you’ll end up with delays, fines, or failed inspections that cost more time and money than doing it correctly from the start. We keep projects moving as efficiently as possible while making sure everything is done right and documented properly.
Start with licensing and insurance. In New York, electrical work requires a licensed electrician, and only a licensed master electrician can file and close permits. If someone can’t show you their license or says permits aren’t necessary, walk away. You’re setting yourself up for problems.
Ask about their experience with your type of project. If you have a historic brownstone with old wiring, you want someone who’s done that work before and knows how to handle the challenges. If you’re installing a commercial system, you need a contractor with commercial experience and the ability to work within your timeline.
Get a written estimate before work starts. It should outline what’s included, what permits are required, and what the total cost will be. If someone gives you a vague quote or pressures you to start immediately without paperwork, that’s a red flag.
Finally, check that they’re actually local and established in Brooklyn. A contractor who knows Gravesend and the surrounding area understands local building codes, has relationships with inspectors, and isn’t going to disappear if something needs to be fixed after the job is done. You want someone who’s been around and plans to stay around.
Other Services we provide in Gravesend