Kingwood sits at the far northeast corner of Houston, wrapped around the West Fork of the
San Jacinto River and Lake Houston. Power here is delivered by
CenterPoint Energy, which runs the poles
and wires for the whole region under Texas’s deregulated market — you buy your electricity
from a retail provider, but CenterPoint is the one that keeps the line standing in a storm,
and that line has taken a beating.
Natural gas is the other half of the picture. CenterPoint
Energy also distributes gas across most of Kingwood, which makes a natural-gas backup
generator for a Kingwood home unusually practical here — a great many homes can fuel one off
the line that’s already in the ground.
What sets this market apart is water and trees. Kingwood is the
“Livable Forest” — a master-planned
community built into a dense pine canopy — and that canopy drops limbs across CenterPoint
lines in every windstorm. It also floods: Hurricane Harvey inundated thousands of Kingwood
homes in 2017, and flood-zone elevation is a genuine, address-by-address concern here in a
way it simply isn’t in most of Houston.
A permanently installed standby generator answers all of it. It senses the outage and brings
the house back — usually inside a minute — and keeps running as long as the grid stays down,
whether that’s a summer thunderstorm or a week after a hurricane.
See how installation works →
Not sure a standby is right for your home, or what size you’d need? Two short reads help:
do I need a standby generator
and how to size one.
You can also dig into the
sizing overview on the hub.