Tesla-powered homes promise to keep the lights on in outage-prone Houston— but it comes with cons, too


A new development of 11 three-story detached townhomes in Houston holds the promise of energy self-sufficiency in a city where power can be unreliable. Each three-bedroom home is equipped with Tesla solar roofs and batteries.

It’s the first of its kind in the U.S. — and the builder is promising that “if the power ever goes out in Houston, for whatever reason, they’ve got you covered,” according to KHOU 11 reporter Ron Treviño.

Texas is the only state that isn’t part of the national power grid. Rather, it has its own power grid — but that means, if anything goes wrong, it can’t draw on power from elsewhere.

Couple this with an aging infrastructure and a propensity to be hit with severe weather events, and this leads to frequent blackouts that last days or longer. In fact, Texas experienced 210 weather-related outages between 2000 and 2023 — more than any other state, according to Climate Central.

“Because our power grid is so terrible and we lose power for days on end, we have people that have lost all their groceries,” Jaime Fallon, director of sales with NextGen Real Estate, told KHOU 11.

The Oaks of Shady Acres offers energy self-sufficiency with Tesla solar shingles. These solar shingles work with Tesla’s Powerwall home battery storage to make the homes self-sufficient. The homes also come with electric vehicle chargers.

“Residents benefit from free, clean energy while also profiting from surplus power sold back to the grid,” said a sponsored article about the project.

As of late last month, five homes were still up for sale. Fallon claims that although the builder, Utopia Homes, is using Tesla technology, the backlash against Tesla CEO Elon Musk is not hurting demand. Utopia is a subsidiary of Goldman Investments, which calls Tesla a partner on its website.

“We have honestly had no issues with Trump and Musk backlash. In fact, I had over 150-plus people at my brokers’ open. It was insane, people were very excited. Houston is an oil and gas place, so having the first Tesla-powered homes is unheard of,” Fallon told Realtor.com. She said buyers are mostly interested in reliable power.



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