Bernardo Raymundo
Commercial Fleet LeadThe Mobility House
Bernardo Raymundo is the Commercial Fleet Lead at The Mobility House in North America. He helps fleet operators understand how charging and energy management can support rapid fleet electrification and emissions reductions, focusing on a wide range of markets including last-mile delivery, airports and municipalities. Bernardo has extensive experience working with all types of fleets via his experience at Samsara and Fleetr. He has a deep understanding of fleet's needs and the challenges they face. Bernardo started his career at Tesla where he was a founding member of Tesla's fleet sales team and developed his passion for e-mobility.
The Mobility House is a world leader in Charging and Energy Management. The Mobility House (TMH) has helped deploy and manages charging at 2,500+ EV depots across the world with its hybrid hardware/software Charge Management System, ChargePilot. TMH's goal is to minimize customer's CapEx and OpEx while providing the most advanced, resilient and reliable Charge Management System.
Bernardo Raymundo’s Session(s):
1:40 pm–2:25 pm | Wed, March 18, 2026
Designing for Scale: Future-Proofing Your Charging Site from Day One
As EV adoption accelerates, charging sites built for today’s needs can quickly become outdated tomorrow. Smart design from the start is key to ensuring that infrastructure investments remain cost-effective and adaptable as demand grows. This panel will explore how to plan sites that not only meet current requirements but can seamlessly scale to support larger fleets, higher charging loads, and emerging technologies.
Bringing together expertise from Southwest Industrial Electric, The Mobility House, Starline, Pearce, and SKYDATA-IoT, this discussion will highlight strategies for future-proofing—from electrical design and load management to modular power systems and reliable multi-carrier cellular connectivity. Attendees will gain insights on how to avoid costly retrofits, design with growth in mind, and position their sites as long-term assets in the EV ecosystem.
Takeaways:
- How to design charging sites that can easily scale with future EV demand
- Infrastructure strategies to minimize retrofit costs and maximize ROI
- The role of energy management, modular power, and connectivity in site resilience
- Real-world lessons on balancing immediate needs with long-term growth
