Apprenticeship
Atlanta Technical College pipeline
Two paid apprentice seats every cohort, and a standing offer to hire every graduate who finishes. The next generation of Atlanta electricians shouldn't have to leave town to learn the trade.
★ ATL · Since 2009 · Virginia-Highland
Voltline started on the corner of Virginia and Highland in 2009 with one van and a hand-painted sign. Seventeen years later, we cover the whole metro — north to Alpharetta, south to Hapeville, east to Stone Mountain, west to Mableton — and we still answer the phone the same way: with a real Atlantan.
Section 0 · This week
A snapshot of what the trucks are doing right now — pulled from a recent week of work across the metro.
RESIDENTIAL · 30306
COMMERCIAL · WESTSIDE
EV · DECATURSection I · Where it started
The streets where the company got its first calls — and where we still spend our weekends.
Virginia-Highland
30306Where Voltline started — a bungalow rewire on N. Highland Ave that turned into a business.
Morningside
30306Our first hundred jobs. Knob-and-tube swaps and porch lighting.
Inman Park
30307Beltline-adjacent lofts, mill-house panels, and Eastside Trail merchants.
Decatur
30030Bungalow rewires, Oakhurst porch lights, and EV installs.
Old Fourth Ward
30312Krog Street merchants, Ponce City Market tenants, beltline lofts.
East Atlanta Village
30316After-hours response and storefront safety inspections.
Section II · What we mean to Atlanta
Voltline isn't a logo dropped onto a van. We're neighbors, coaches, apprentices, and first-call electricians for the streets we grew up on.
We started in 2009 with a single bungalow rewire on N. Highland Avenue. The owner asked us to come back the next week for her neighbor. That neighbor referred two more. Seventeen years later, the playbook hasn't changed: earn the next job by doing this one right, and reinvest in the neighborhood that gave you the first one.
What that looks like in practice: paid apprentice seats for Atlanta Technical College graduates, donated rough-in work on Habitat for Humanity homes across English Avenue and Vine City, free panel walk-throughs for every new BeltLine merchant, and the temp service that powers the Virginia-Highland Summerfest main stage every July.
We hire locally, we train locally, and we spend locally. The kids on the Inman Park little-league jerseys with our orange logo are the same kids whose parents call us when a breaker trips on a Sunday night. That loop — work, give back, get called again — is the whole company.
Owner-operated. Atlanta-trained. Rooted in the same neighborhood we started in.
◆ The crew · Morningside routeLocal techs. Local routes. Local pride.
Section III · In the community
The same neighborhoods that gave us our first jobs are where our kids go to school, where we coach little league, and where we give back when we can.
Apprenticeship
Two paid apprentice seats every cohort, and a standing offer to hire every graduate who finishes. The next generation of Atlanta electricians shouldn't have to leave town to learn the trade.
Habitat for Humanity
Donated rough-in and finish work on Habitat Atlanta homes across English Avenue, Vine City, and Pittsburgh since 2018. Twelve homes and counting.
BeltLine merchants
Every new small business that opens within two blocks of the Eastside or Westside Trail gets a free panel walk-through in their first year.
Virginia-Highland Civic
We've quietly run the electrical for the Summerfest main stage since 2015. If you've danced in the street on N. Highland in July, that was our temp service.
Atlanta Food Bank
Free quarterly thermal inspections on the Food Bank's cold-storage panels. Spoiled inventory is the last thing a food pantry should worry about.
Little League sponsor
Three teams on three jerseys every spring. We're the dugout with the orange logo and the dad-coach hollering at second base.
Section IV · Milestones
2009
Founded in a Virginia-Highland garage. One van, one Master license, one promise: pick up the phone.
2012
First sponsorship: Inman Middle School robotics. We still wire their competition rigs.
2014
Georgia Power Trade Ally. Joined the VaHi Civic Association as a sustaining member.
2018
Started donating electrical labor on Habitat for Humanity builds in Vine City and English Avenue.
2022
Coverage expands across the four cardinals — north to Alpharetta, south to East Point, east to Stone Mountain, west to Mableton.
2026
Still answering the phone ourselves. Still rooted at the corner of Virginia and Highland.
★ Atlanta-owned · Atlanta-served
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