
What you need to know:
- EV Realty opens 76-port truck charging hub in San Bernardino, California with 9 MW capacity for 200+ medium- and heavy-duty trucks daily
- Supports all truck models with CCS and MCS ports, powered by Kempower chargers and managed with Synop software
- Located near I-10/I-215 and San Bernardino Intermodal Facility, serving Southern California freight corridors
- Early customers include J.B. Hunt, Gate City Beverage, and electric carrier Nevoya, driving fleet electrification
EV Realty continues to charge ahead with much-needed charging infrastructure.
Today, the Charging-as-a-Service (CaaS) company unveiled its flagship multi-fleet truck charging hub in San Bernardino, California featuring 76 high-power charging ports and 9 MW of capacity, enough to serve over 200 medium- and heavy-duty trucks day.
Impressively, the company broke ground for the site in September 2025, meaning it was completed in only six months.
[Related: EV Realty lands Outpost investment, adds Stockton property]
The hub supports all makes and models of medium- and heavy-duty trucks, offering CCS ports for current vehicles and MCS ports for next-generation big rigs. It features Kempower chargers delivering up to 1.2 MW for MCS and 500 kW for CCS, with spring-assisted cables. Synop software provides advanced power management, reservations, and fleet insights, while 24/7 on-site staff and security provide reliable, continuous operations.
EV Realty's 76-port truck charging hub in San Bernardino, California, delivers 9 MW of capacity to support more than 200 medium- and heavy-duty trucks each day.EV Realty
Strategically located near the San Bernardino Intermodal Facility and surrounded by more than 60 million square feet of industrial warehouse space, the hub is in an area that serves nearly 17,000 medium- and heavy-duty trucks. Positioned close to I-10 and I-215, the site sits on a major freight corridor linking the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, providing fleets with convenient, high-capacity charging along a critical Southern California freight route.
Several customers have already signed on, including J.B. Hunt Transport, beverage distributor Gate City Beverage, and Nevoya, a fully electric trucking company.
With the Golden State accelerating toward zero-emission trucking, EV Realty's hub represents a key piece of the infrastructure needed to support fleets transitioning to electric vehicles. The facility is designed for reliable, high-volume charging, helping fleets reduce downtime and maintain productivity while meeting sustainability goals.
[Related: 2025 was a tough year for commercial ZEVs, but the transition still moves forward in 2026 and beyond]
"The Inland Empire is where freight from the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach gets sorted and sent across the country by truck and rail," said EV Realty CEO Patrick Sullivan. "Fleets operating here are doing some of the most important and demanding work in the supply chain. They need reliable and affordable access to high-power charging so that they can move beyond pilots and make electrification a real business decision. That's exactly what we've built here."






















