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While it is not shown in the visible text, the page source for the permit listing includes an address: 2151 Cowell Blvd, which is the northernmost building in the Oakshade Town Center strip mall south of 80: Google Maps
Construction has begun. Not sure when construction started, but they are fairly far along. I stopped by today to check on the progress and took some photos to share.
Looking at the overhead drone photos in post #10, the Supercharger cabinets look like V3. Also there’s only 4 of them...there aren’t enough cabinets for the number of pedestals for a V2 setup.
Yes, they are. Urban superchargers are a flavor of V2 and Tesla is still building those. There are also maybe a very, very few straggler traditional V2 locations out there that were originally planned before the switch to V3 and that haven't been built yet. Some of those will have been redesigned as V3 but a few will still be V2. One example of that is Olema, CA. Also Seattle, WA - Ballard Way is currently in construction and may be a traditional V2 station. That's what it was when they built it the first time, but then the contractor had to tear all the stalls out for some reason and start over. So, we'll see what they actually end up having there.
Huh??? The back-end supercharger hardware, i.e. the underlying stuff that makes the superchargers work, is entirely the same between the urban and traditional style V2 superchargers. The only difference is that the configuration of the rectifiers in the urban cabinets is slightly different as they are partitioned into two separate sections that each feed a single charging post (of the 2 connected to a single cabinet). In terms of hardware, the "big" differences between the two types is all basically irrelevant, minor, or cosmetic stuff. The charge posts have a very different design so that they have a smaller profile/footprint. They use slightly thinner conductors from the cabinets to the posts because the max current is lower since output to a single post is capped at half the cabinet's full power.