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<br />Enterprise Energy <br />2925 Dean Parkway, Execu8ve Suite 300 <br />Minneapolis, MN 55416 <br />(952) 212-0824 <br /> <br />8 <br /> <br />Construction will not require a water supply. All waist and debris from the project will be <br />gathered on site and disposed of. A construction trailer and portable toilet will be placed on site <br />when we begin groundbreaking. <br /> <br />Construction happens in phases, typically with two phases occurring at the same time when <br />the first phase is halfway done. The first phase of the installation is the footings. There will be <br />rows of I-beams sticking out of the ground. When about half of the field has I-beams installed, the <br />racking system begins being placed on the I-beams on the completed portion. When the raking is <br />installed on about half of the field, electricians will begin installing the solar panels on the <br />completed portion. When solar panels are installed halfway through the field, electricians will <br />begin wiring the system together. After the installation is complete it will undergo about a month <br />of testing from the installer and the electric utility before it becomes commercially operational. <br /> <br />Access to the site will be by a packed class five gravel road approximately twenty feet wide <br />with a twenty-five-foot entrance. Construction parking will be located entirely within the parcel. <br />No additional parking is required. Multiple simi truckloads of equipment such as solar panels and <br />steel racking will be delivered through the construction process. Multiple pickup trucks, workers, <br />passenger vehicles, bobcats and equipment will be on site most days during construction. <br /> <br /> <br />Access to the site will be minimal after construction. An engineer will need to access the <br />property by pickup truck at least twice a year to examine the equipment. Maintenance crews will <br />be on site at least twice a year to manage the vegetative cover and remove weeds. <br /> <br />The array will be monitored 24/7 265 days a year by a computer monitoring system that <br />measures the power being produced on site. If a problem arises, the system will alert the system <br />owner so that appropriate personnel can be dispatched to the site to resolve the issue. <br />