Kelly's Appliances — New Green Acres Showroom, Eugene
When Kelly’s opened a brand-new showroom in Eugene, Builder’s Electric wired it from the ground up. The family-owned appliance retailer — a fixture in the community since 1974 — moved into a new building on Green Acres Road in the Delta Oaks Shopping Center, and turning that space into a working appliance showroom meant building the electrical to fit, start to finish. Builder’s Electric handled everything from the lighting down to the low-voltage, so Kelly’s could open the doors on a space that looks sharp and runs right.
A retail showroom lives and dies on how the product looks under the lights, and Builder’s Electric built the commercial electrical and lighting to make Kelly’s inventory shine. That meant laying in the power distribution, branch circuits, and showroom lighting across the whole floor — bright, even, and energy-efficient, so a refrigerator or a range looks as good on the sales floor as it will in a customer’s home. In a new building, getting the lighting design right the first time sets the tone for everything else.
An appliance showroom isn’t an open box of shelves — it’s a series of staged setups, and each one needs its own power. Builder’s Electric wired the various display bays for Kelly’s different configurations, so live appliances — ranges, ovens, laundry, and the high-end brands shown in real kitchen settings — could be installed, plugged in, and demonstrated right on the floor. The work extended outside, too: Builder’s Electric installed the exterior lighting that keeps the building and its parking area lit, visible, and safe after dark.
A building full of premium appliances needs protection, so Builder’s Electric also set up the low-voltage security — the systems that watch the inventory and the building when the showroom is closed. From the service panel to the security system, it’s a complete package: one contractor responsible for the whole electrical picture. It’s the kind of full-scope commercial fit-out Builder’s Electric delivers throughout Eugene, Springfield, and Lane County — lighting, power, low-voltage, and everything in between, designed, built, and maintained.












