There is a version of an electrician you only get from someone who has worked the same streets for thirty years.
David started Evanson Electric in 1994, and the address book hasn't really changed since — Surrey, Delta, White Rock, the South Fraser. The houses he wired early are now the houses he's upgrading: the panel he labeled a decade ago, the kitchen circuit that needs to grow, the older service that finally has to come up to standard.
That continuity is the quiet advantage. When the person quoting the job is the same person who'll be standing at your panel — and who has opened a thousand like it nearby — you skip the guesswork. You get a straight read on what's safe to leave, what genuinely needs doing, and what it will actually cost before anything comes apart.
No call-centre. No rotating crew. The owner, the wire, and thirty years of the same neighbourhood.
The work itself is unglamorous and that's the point: a service change done to code, a stubborn dead circuit traced to its cause, lighting that lands exactly where you'd reach for the switch. The reward isn't drama — it's a homeowner who never thinks about their wiring again.





