Commercial and industrial electrical for the buildings Texas actually runs on—warehouses, data centers, plants, apartments, and shopping centers. Self-performed by the electrical arm of a commercial construction group.
Pillars Electric works in five commercial and industrial sectors. The electrical fundamentals don’t change—distribution sized for real load, code-compliant rough-in, inspection-ready finish—but the sequencing, the coordination, and the failure mode the owner cares about most are different in each one. We pace the work to the building, not the other way around.
Because we’re the electrical arm of a commercial construction group, the standard is a builder’s standard: read the whole set, hold the schedule, coordinate with every other trade, and turn it over clean. Each sector below links to its detail page—scope, sequencing, cost factors, and the questions owners and GCs actually ask. Pair it with the services we self-perform across all five.
High-bay lighting, power for material handling, and distribution that keeps the supply chain moving—phased around dock schedules and inventory.
High-density distribution, redundancy, and clean commissioning for facilities where downtime is the costliest line item on the page.
Motor control, three-phase distribution, and maintenance for facilities where a stopped line is the costliest event of the quarter.
Unit, common-area, and amenity electrical at scale—ground-up and occupied renovation, sequenced around residents and leasing.
Tenant build-outs, restaurant fit-outs, and multi-tenant electrical coordinated around occupied centers and storefront schedules.
Every sector has its own failure mode. A data center can’t take a surprise outage. A distribution center can’t lose the dock during peak season. A plant can’t stop the line. A multifamily property can’t inconvenience occupied units past the day’s window. A retail center can’t close storefronts while the surrounding tenants are open. The first job of the electrical contractor is to not be the reason any of that happens.
That’s why we work like builders, not subs. We plan shutdowns, write the switching sequence, coordinate with the GC and the other trades, and document what we did so the next person in the panel has a fighting chance. Across every sector the deliverable is the same: code-compliant, inspection-ready, on schedule. When the building is open and running, we also handle preventive maintenance and emergency repair—same crew, same standard.
Plans, specs, walkthroughs, or an early-stage conversation. We review and follow up fast.