Minnesota’s university system is one of the largest in the country — with research institutions, medical schools, and campus operations that depend on uninterrupted power across hundreds of buildings.
University campuses face compounding power quality risk — a single event can impact research, IT operations, student housing, and central plant systems simultaneously. With hundreds of buildings on card access and security monitoring, power quality failures create campus-wide exposure.
Sensitive research instruments, electron microscopes, spectroscopy equipment, and environmental chambers require exceptionally clean power. A single transient event can corrupt months of research data, damage calibrated equipment, and derail grant-funded projects with irreplaceable timelines.
Card access systems, surveillance cameras, emergency notification systems, and building security across hundreds of campus structures depend on continuous, clean power. A transient event can disable building access, compromise student safety systems, and create campus-wide security gaps.
Campus data centers, network switches, wireless infrastructure, and student information systems form the digital backbone of university operations. Transients cause server failures, network outages, and data corruption that disrupts academic operations, online learning, and administrative systems simultaneously.
Central heating and cooling plants, building automation systems, and campus energy management infrastructure operate continuously. Power quality events degrade VFDs, chillers, and control systems — driving up energy costs and accelerating equipment replacement cycles across the entire campus.
These are documented outcomes from higher education institutions that installed TPS power conditioning and surge protection.
Minnesota’s higher education footprint is massive — the University of Minnesota system (Twin Cities, Duluth, Morris, Rochester), the Minnesota State system with 54 institutions, Mayo Clinic’s medical education programs, and private universities including St. Thomas, Macalester, and Carleton. These campuses collectively operate thousands of buildings with research labs, medical training facilities, campus data centers, and central plant systems that generate constant internal transient activity.
As an authorized TPS dealer serving Minnesota, Pearl Snap Consulting provides single-source accountability from power quality assessment through installation — backed by a 30-year warranty.
Take the Assessment — get an instant risk score based on your operations profile. Select your facility type in Step 1 to see results tailored to your campus operation.
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