The plant is one of the largest rooftop arrays in northern Germany. It is located on the premises of Streiff & Helmold, a Braunschweig-based logistics and packaging company.
Frontier-BS-Eins spans more than 30,000 square meters or 5 football fields, consisting of 4989 modules.
It produces 1,042,800 kwhs in electricity per year and the power is fed directly into the local grid operated by BS Energy.
Status: In Operation
The plant was built and put into operation in 2011. The array is spread over several large rooftops with a total nominal capacity of 1 MWp. The plant is in the same industrial complex as Frontier-BS-Eins. The plant was developed by Frontier Renewables GmbH and sold to solarSTEP, a German engineering, procurement and construction company.
Status: In Operation
Frontier, one of the early California solar developers, plans to build a 3 MWp utility scale solar PV plant in Badger Creek, CA. The plant will be built on land owned by the founders of the company and will be one of the largest arrays in central California.
Frontier-BC-One will be located on a former airplane landing strip at the center of a 377 acre property nestled in the foothills of the Sequioa National Forest. The plant represents the first phase of the founders larger goal of a building a 21st century green community on the property.
With high solar radiation and an elevation that ensures clear and cloud-free skies, Frontier-BC-One is expected to produce more than 5,000,000 kilowatt hours a year that will be fed back directly into the distribution grid owned by the local utility.
Status: In Development
Frontier built a small 25 KWp solar array on the roof of its offices in Wolfsburg, Germany. The project was designed to test mounting systems and panels.
Status: In Operation