The Valley has the longest summers in the Lower Mainland. A roof is a way to keep them.
Drive east out of the rain and the light changes. The Fraser Valley opens up — Abbotsford, Chilliwack, the flats between — and the summers run long and bright, the kind of sun that hits a south-facing roof for hours after the coast has clouded over. Most of that light just warms the shingles and leaves. A solar array is the decision to keep some of it.
E3 Solar designs each system around the actual house — the pitch of the roof, the way the afternoon shade moves across it, the way the home pulls power through the day. It isn't a box of panels dropped on a roof. It's an array laid out string by string to make the most of where the sun actually lands.
The work runs in a clear order: a site assessment and shading study, then a design sized to the home, then permits and a weather-tight mount, then the electrical tie-in and inspection before a single panel goes live. Nothing is energized until it passes. When it's done, you can watch what the roof is making — day by day, string by string.
“A good install disappears into the roofline. The only thing you notice afterward is the number going up.”The E3 Solar approach
From the first roof to the last row.
Rooftop arrays
Grid-tied panel arrays mounted, flashed and wired into the home — the heart of what E3 Solar does across the Valley.

Ground-mount systems
For properties with land and sun — racked arrays set where the roof can't carry the system.

Battery-ready design
Laid out so storage can be added later — keep more of what the roof makes for the evening.

Monitoring & service
Real-time production monitoring, plus diagnostics when an existing array stops producing what it should.

Request a quote
Tell us about the roof and where you are in the Valley — we'll set up a free site assessment.