Hear from Our Customers
Your breakers trip when you run the microwave and the air conditioner at the same time. The lights dim when someone turns on the dryer. You want an EV charger but your panel can’t handle it.
These aren’t minor inconveniences. They’re signs your electrical system wasn’t built for how you actually live now.
Most Park Slope homes—especially brownstones—were wired decades ago when households used a fraction of the power they do today. No laptops in every room. No smart thermostats, streaming devices, or plans to charge a car overnight. The gap between what your system was designed for and what you’re asking it to do keeps growing.
Upgrading your electrical system means your home can handle modern life without constant workarounds. It means safety, reliability, and the ability to add what you need without wondering if your panel can take it. You get a system that works the way you expect it to—and the documentation to prove it’s done right when it matters.
Electrified is a licensed and insured electrical contractor based in Brooklyn. We handle residential and commercial electrical services across Park Slope, from brownstone rewiring to tenant fit-outs and system upgrades.
Park Slope properties come with their own challenges. Older buildings with outdated wiring. Limited panel capacity. Tight spaces and historic details that require careful work. We’ve spent years working in these buildings, so we know what to expect before we open the wall.
Our team includes licensed electricians who handle permits, inspections, and code compliance as part of the job. We’re not the cheapest option in Park Slope, NY—and that’s intentional. You’re hiring people who show up, do the work right, and make sure it passes inspection the first time.
You reach out, and we schedule a time to come see the job. Could be a panel upgrade, a lighting project, troubleshooting an issue, or wiring for a renovation. We look at what you’re working with and what you’re trying to accomplish.
From there, we give you a clear estimate. No vague ranges or surprise fees later. You’ll know what the work costs, what’s included, and how long it takes.
Once you approve it, we handle the permits if the job requires them. Then we do the work—wiring, installation, testing, whatever the scope calls for. If it’s a larger project, we’ll walk you through what’s happening as we go.
When we’re done, the work gets inspected if needed. You get documentation showing everything was done to code. And if something doesn’t work the way it should, we come back and make it right. That’s the process.
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Our electrical contracting services in Park Slope, NY cover the full range of work your property might need. That includes panel upgrades, circuit installations, lighting design, generator hookups, EV charger installations, smart home wiring, troubleshooting, and repairs.
For residential properties, that often means upgrading from a 100-amp panel to a 200-amp system—the modern standard for homes with central air, multiple appliances, and any plans for electric vehicle charging. In brownstones, it can also mean rewiring individual units to handle higher loads or adding GFCI and AFCI protection where it’s required by code.
For commercial and industrial clients, the work tends to focus on tenant fit-outs, equipment power, service upgrades, and ongoing maintenance. Brooklyn businesses need electrical systems that keep operations running and meet city inspection standards.
Every job includes permit handling when required, code-compliant installation, and documentation you can show during a sale or inspection. You’re not just getting the work done—you’re getting it done in a way that protects your property value and keeps you covered if someone asks questions later.
If your breakers trip regularly, your lights flicker when you use certain appliances, or you’re adding something like an EV charger or central air, then yes—you likely need an upgrade. Most older panels in Park Slope were designed for 60 to 100 amps, which was fine when homes used far less electricity.
Today’s homes pull significantly more power. Between kitchen appliances, HVAC systems, computers, smart devices, and potential EV charging, a 200-amp panel is the standard. Anything less means you’re constantly managing what you can run at the same time, and that’s not sustainable.
An upgrade also improves safety. Older panels may lack modern circuit protection, and some—like Federal Pacific or Zinsco panels—are known fire hazards. We can assess what you have and tell you whether an upgrade is optional or necessary.
Most panel upgrades take one to two days, depending on the scope. That includes removing the old panel, installing the new one, reconnecting circuits, and testing everything to make sure it works.
If your service line from the street also needs upgrading, that adds time—and requires coordination with the utility company. In some cases, especially in older Park Slope brownstones, there may be additional work to bring wiring up to code or replace outdated circuits.
Your power will be off during parts of the installation, so plan accordingly. We’ll walk you through the timeline before starting and let you know what to expect. The goal is to get your power back on safely and quickly, with everything documented and inspected.
A licensed electrician has completed formal training, passed state exams, and holds a valid license to perform electrical work. That license means they’re qualified to handle complex installations, pull permits, and ensure work meets NYC electrical code.
A handyman typically doesn’t have that training or licensing. They might be able to swap out a light fixture or outlet, but they’re not qualified—or legally allowed—to do major electrical work like panel upgrades, circuit installations, or anything requiring a permit.
Hiring a certified electrical contractor in Park Slope, NY means the work gets done right, passes inspection, and doesn’t put your property or insurance coverage at risk. If something goes wrong with unpermitted or unlicensed work, you’re the one who has to fix it—and that usually costs more than doing it right the first time.
Yes, but it depends on your current electrical setup. Most EV chargers require a dedicated 240-volt circuit, which pulls significant power—usually 40 to 50 amps. If your panel is already near capacity, you’ll need an upgrade before adding the charger.
In brownstones, there’s also the question of where the charger goes and how to run the wiring. If you’re parking on the street, installation gets more complicated. If you have a driveway or garage, it’s more straightforward.
We can assess your panel, calculate your current load, and tell you what’s needed to safely add a charger. That might mean a panel upgrade, a subpanel, or just adding a new circuit if you have the capacity. Either way, the work requires a permit and inspection to make sure it’s done to code.
Most electrical work beyond simple repairs requires a permit in New York City. That includes panel upgrades, new circuits, major rewiring, EV charger installations, and generator hookups. The permit ensures the work meets code and gets inspected by the city.
Some homeowners try to skip permits to save time or money, but that creates problems later. Unpermitted work can fail inspection during a sale, void your insurance, or result in fines if discovered. It also means there’s no record that the work was done safely or correctly.
When you hire us, permit handling is part of the service. We pull the permits, schedule the inspections, and make sure everything passes. You get documentation proving the work was done right, which protects your property value and keeps you covered down the line.
It depends entirely on the scope. A panel upgrade typically runs between $2,500 and $5,000, depending on the size of the panel, the condition of your existing wiring, and whether your service line needs upgrading. Adding a dedicated circuit might cost $500 to $1,500. EV charger installations range from $1,000 to $3,000, depending on your setup.
Larger projects—like rewiring a brownstone unit or a full commercial fit-out—cost more because they involve more labor, materials, and coordination. Every property is different, so the best way to get an accurate number is to have someone come look at the job.
We’ll give you a clear estimate upfront, broken down by labor and materials. You’ll know what you’re paying before any work starts. If someone gives you a vague range or refuses to put it in writing, that’s a red flag.
Other Services we provide in Park Slope