About
Progressive Industrial Electrical, Inc. (P-I-E) operates a UL 508A-certified in-house panel shop — a rare capability that lets Salt Lake City facility managers source custom-built, code-compliant control panels from the same contractor handling field installation. Founded in 2008 and locally owned, P-I-E covers the full voltage spectrum: high-voltage power distribution, overhead line work, and transformer installation at the utility interface; medium-voltage switchgear and MCC commissioning at the building level; and low-voltage distribution, VFD installation, and electrical design at the equipment level. This end-to-end scope makes P-I-E a strong partner for industrial facilities, warehouses, and manufacturing operations undergoing capacity upgrades, equipment modernization, or greenfield buildouts across the Wasatch Front. What genuinely differentiates P-I-E from most electrical contractors is in-house SCADA and PLC capability. Their controls team handles system design, PLC and HMI programming, and retrofits to existing automation infrastructure — eliminating the coordination gap between electrical rough-in and controls commissioning that routinely delays industrial projects. They also provide AutoCAD Electrical drafting for new designs and redlines, instrumentation installation and calibration, and industrial communications infrastructure including fiber, copper Ethernet, and network configuration for indoor and outdoor environments. For facility managers overseeing manufacturing plants, processing facilities, or large industrial campuses in the Salt Lake City metro, P-I-E offers an unusually integrated service offering: engineered drawings, UL-listed panel fabrication, field installation across all voltage classes, controls programming, and instrumentation — under one contractor relationship. Their stated commitment to integrity, transparency, and fair pricing aligns well with the accountability standards facility managers and general contractors require on complex, schedule-sensitive industrial electrical projects.