Orange Park sits where the suburbs meet the water, tucked between the
St. Johns River, Doctors Lake, and the
winding Black Creek basin. That water is
what makes the area beautiful and also what makes it vulnerable. When a slow storm parks over
Clay County, the creek and its tributaries back up instead of draining, and neighborhoods that
felt safely inland end up under water.
Most of the area is powered by Clay Electric
Cooperative, a member-owned co-op rather than a big municipal or investor utility. It is
a distinction worth knowing: the co-op serves a wide, semi-rural territory, which can mean more
miles of line to inspect and restore after a hurricane rakes through the trees.
Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and then Hurricane Irma in 2017 ended any sense that Orange Park was
far enough from the coast to shrug off a storm. Irma in particular is still fresh: Black Creek
crested at a record 28.5 feet and flooded hundreds of homes across the Orange Park and
Middleburg area, with rescue crews working around the clock.
A permanently installed standby generator takes that uncertainty off the table. It senses the
outage and restores your home on its own, usually in seconds, and keeps running as long as the
grid is down.
See how installation works →