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I-85 Exit 60 · Duncan, SC

The Duncan Hub at 30 Freeman Farm Rd

The largest public DCFC hub on I-85 in the Southeast — sited at the Atlanta–Charlotte midpoint. 10 Tesla V4 Supercharger stalls paired with 6 Espen EVC/D360 hyper-fast dispensers on a 2.5 MW Duke Energy service. The only regional hub serving light, medium, and heavy-duty EVs.

Aerial view of the Duncan hub beside I-85 Exit 60

16

DCFC Ports

Federal NEVI Minimum

2.5 MW

Duke Energy Service

103,900

Vehicles/Day on I-85

Two parcels. One destination hub.

The IFC drawings split the site into a 0.93-acre charging parcel and a 1.26-acre retail outparcel. The charging parcel holds 10 Tesla V4 Supercharger stalls (4 pull-through for Class 4–8 trucks), 6 Espen EVC/D360 dispensers, and the 2.5 MW Duke Energy service. The outparcel anchors the dwell-time experience — a BTS or ground-lease opportunity for QSR, c-store, or coffee.

Site plan schematic for the Duncan hub

Lot 1-C-2

0.93 acres

Hub parcel

Lot 1-C-3

1.26 acres

BTS retail outparcel

Parking

18 spaces

12 standard + 4 trailer + 2 ADA

Engineer

Matrix R70154

Sealed in SC · IFC 3/9/2026

16 DCFC ports. Tesla V4 + Espen EVC/D360. Heavy-duty capable.

Two hardware platforms, one service. Tesla V4 Superchargers pair with Espen EVC/D360 hyper-fast dispensers to serve every connector standard and every EV class — light, medium, and Class 4–8 heavy-duty.

Tesla

V4 Supercharger

10 posts

Up to 325 kW per post

  • 6 standard V4 Supercharger stalls
  • 4 pull-through stalls for Class 4–8 trucks
  • Fed by 3 Tesla V3/V3.5 Supercharger cabinets
  • NACS connector

Espen

EVC/D360

6 dispensers

Up to 360 kW per dispenser

  • Level 3 hyper-fast DCFC dispensers
  • CCS1 + NACS connectors
  • Fed by 2 Espen 360 kW power cabinets
  • Open-network, interoperable with all EVs

Heavy-duty access: The four pull-through Tesla stalls make this the only hub in the region public-charging-capable for Class 4–8 trucks. Fleet operators can charge on the same corridor their drivers already use.

A 2.5 MW Duke Energy service, built to scale.

The hub is fed by a 2,500 kVA Duke Energy transformer stepping down to 480V 3-phase 4-wire service at a 3,000A switchboard. That 2.5 MW headroom is what makes it possible to run 10 Tesla V4 stalls and 6 Espen 360 kW dispensers concurrently — and leaves margin for future battery storage and canopy solar.

Civil and power drawings are IFC as of 3/9/2026 — sealed in South Carolina, under Tesla review, and ready for construction.

Utility Spec Sheet

Utility provider
Duke Energy
Transformer
2,500 kVA
Service
480V 3-phase 4-wire
Switchboard
3,000A
Total capacity
2.5 MW
Engineer of record
Matrix Technologies · R70154

From family land to Southeast prototype.

2024

Site Identified

Family land at I-85 Exit 60 identified as a NEVI-eligible corridor site.

2025

Site Acquired

30 Freeman Farm Rd acquired. Permits filed. NEVI application submitted. Renovo Energy Solutions partnership signed.

March 2026

IFC Plans Issued

Civil + power plans IFC as of 3/9/2026 — Matrix Technologies R70154, sealed in SC, sent to Tesla for approval.

2026

Construction & Opening

Site construction, Duke Energy 2.5 MW service energization, commissioning, and public opening.

2027+

Replication

Next NEVI sites along I-85, I-26, and I-95 corridors using the Duncan template.

The people and partners behind the build.

View all partners →

Engineer of Record

Matrix Technologies

Civil + power, project R70154, sealed in South Carolina

Development Partner

Renovo Energy Solutions

Project coordinator (not the hardware OEM)

Utility

Duke Energy

2,500 kVA transformer · 480V 3-phase 4-wire service

Tesla Hardware

Tesla

V4 Supercharger posts and V3/V3.5 cabinets

Non-Tesla Hardware

Espen

EVC/D360 hyper-fast dispensers and 360 kW cabinets

NEVI Administrator

SCDOT · SC Energy Office

Federal NEVI program administration in South Carolina

Ready to visit or partner on this hub?

Schedule a site walk, request the NEVI spec sheet, or talk to the development team.