Prepared by Sophie & Wayne Betts  ·  Jacksonville, FL  ·  2026  ·  Confidential

Own the land.
Own the charger.
Own the wait.

A vertically integrated destination business where we control demand and supply — from the ground up.

Phase 1 — Parking Phase 2 — Tesla Supercharging Phase 3 — Vending
" Tesla Supercharger drivers wait 20–45 minutes per session. We own the place they wait — and everything they spend while waiting goes to us.

What we're building

Jax Park + Charge is a family-owned business in Jacksonville, Florida that stacks three revenue streams on a single asset — land we own outright.

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875
sq miles — city area
400K+
EVs in Florida (2025)
🚗
200K
vehicles/day at I-10/I-95
20–45
min dwell per charge

Why Jacksonville is the right market

Jacksonville isn't just convenient — it's structurally suited to this concept in ways most cities aren't.

Factor Why it matters for us
#2 EV market in the US Florida registered 400,000+ EVs in 2025, growing 6% after incentives ended. This is organic demand — more durable than subsidy-driven markets.
Sprawling geography At 875 sq miles, Jacksonville forces residents to drive long distances daily. Local EV owners need charging regularly — not just road-trippers passing through.
I-95 chokepoint The primary New York–Miami route passes through Jacksonville. Every Tesla owner on the East Coast driving long-haul passes our address. The I-10/I-95 interchange handles 200,000 vehicles per day.
Network gaps Existing Superchargers cluster in Southside. The Northside, airport corridor, and I-10 west remain underserved — genuine white space on Tesla's own map.
JEA utility support Jacksonville Electric Authority actively incentivizes EV infrastructure with favorable rate structures and supportive permitting — a meaningful operational advantage.
Family presence Sophie's family in Jacksonville provides local knowledge, community relationships, and informal operational support during the business's early phases.
The vertical integration advantage: most vending operators need a location owner to say yes. Most EV charging hosts need Tesla to route traffic. Most parking lots compete on price alone. We eliminate all three dependencies simultaneously — we own the land, Tesla's navigation sends traffic to us, and our vending audience is already on-site with 40 minutes to spare.

Three phases, one ecosystem

Each phase funds and validates the next. No phase requires the one after it to succeed — but each makes the next more valuable.

Phase 1
Parking as a business Now → Year 1

Acquire a surface lot in a high-traffic Jacksonville location and install automated pay stations. Revenue flows from day one with almost zero operational overhead. Remote monitoring handles everything; Sophie's family does occasional walk-throughs.

This phase validates location performance, offsets land carrying costs, and builds our local credibility before committing to the larger Phase 2 infrastructure investment. Critically, the land appreciates regardless of what sits on top of it — we are building net worth from day one.

Target: $3,000–$8,000/month net from parking alone, with land carrying costs covered within 12–18 months of operation.
Phase 2
Tesla Supercharging Year 2–3

Invest in Tesla Supercharger hardware under Tesla's Supercharger for Business program — launched in 2025, allowing property owners to own and operate stalls on Tesla's network. This transforms our lot from a parking asset into a named destination in Tesla's in-vehicle navigation system.

ItemDetail
Hardware cost (4-stall)~$250,000 equipment / ~$470,000 all-in installed
Tesla's ongoing fee$0.10/kWh flat — covers software, payments, maintenance & 24/7 network monitoring
Our revenueThe spread between what we charge drivers and our electricity cost, minus Tesla's $0.10/kWh
Navigation listingOur site appears in every Tesla's built-in trip planner automatically — free, permanent marketing
Payback period7–10 years per Tesla's published calculator, depending on site utilization
The Supercharger is a demand generation machine Tesla operates on our behalf. They spend hundreds of millions building the network. We host one node and capture the dwell-time revenue from every driver it sends to us.
Phase 3
On-site vending Year 3–4

With a captive audience waiting 20–45 minutes on-site, we install vending machines. This is a categorically different vending proposition than a standard route — not hoping customers find the machines, but placing machines in front of people who are already there, already waiting, with no alternative.

Standard vending route Our Supercharger vending
Hope customers discover machines Customers are already there, waiting
Compete with nearby food options We are the only option on site
Random customer demographics Consistent affluent Tesla-owner demographic
Must negotiate location access We own the location outright
No guaranteed dwell time 20–45 min of guaranteed wait every single visit

Phase 3 is also where our sons take on genuine operational ownership — tracking sales data, managing restocking on Jacksonville visits, and learning real business fundamentals with real stakes in a real enterprise.

Revenue & capital overview

Indicative figures based on comparable Jacksonville operations and publicly available data. Full financial modeling follows site selection.

Parking — Phase 1
$3–8K
net / month
Automated, no staff required
EV charging — Phase 2
$2–6K
net / month
After electricity cost & Tesla's $0.10/kWh fee
Vending — Phase 3
$1.5–4K
net / month
Captive audience, high margins
Combined at full maturity
before tax and debt service
$6,500–$18,000/mo

Capital requirements by phase

Each phase is a deliberate, staged decision — not a single large bet.

Phase 1 — Parking lot entry cost
Land acquisition (surface lot)
$300K – $700K
Depending on size, location & zoning — 0.5 to 1.5 acres target
Setup & infrastructure
$20K – $50K
Automated pay stations, signage, lighting, remote monitoring
Phase 1 total investment range $320K – $750K
Land / lot acquisition (0.5–1.5 acres, commercial zoning) Phase 1 $300K – $700K
Automated pay stations, signage, lighting & monitoring Phase 1 $20K – $50K
Tesla Supercharger hardware + installation (4-stall) Phase 2 ~$470K
Vending machines (3–6 units with card readers & telemetry) Phase 3 $15K – $40K
The land is not just a cost. It is an appreciating Jacksonville asset that holds and grows in value independently of business performance. Unlike vending machines or even chargers, the land itself is permanent net worth.

Running it from White Plains

The business is designed to operate with minimal physical presence. Here's exactly how each phase is managed remotely.

Phase What requires presence How we handle it
Parking Rare: vandalism, lighting issues, pay station jams Sophie's family on call for walk-throughs; remote monitoring software alerts us instantly via phone
Supercharging Very rare: Tesla handles all technical maintenance under service agreement Tesla's Network Operations Center monitors 24/7; we receive revenue and manage billing remotely
Vending Regular: restocking 1–2× per week per machine; occasional repairs Our sons service machines on Jacksonville visits; remote telemetry tracks sales by SKU in real time
Every Jacksonville family trip becomes a business trip. Travel costs become partially deductible. The second home we eventually buy is adjacent to an active business — not a passive vacation property sitting idle.

From first site visit to full ecosystem

Now – 6 months
Site selection
Define location criteria. Engage a Jacksonville commercial RE broker. Shortlist 3–5 candidate lots. Model parking revenue per site. Select and acquire.
6 – 12 months
Phase 1 launch — parking live
Install automated pay stations. Establish remote monitoring. Begin generating revenue. Learn the site, traffic patterns, and local market firsthand.
12 – 24 months
Phase 2 planning — Supercharger prep
Apply to Tesla's Business program. Complete electrical infrastructure assessment. Secure financing for charger investment. Obtain permits from JEA and city.
24 – 36 months
Phase 2 launch — Superchargers live
Install hardware. Go live on Tesla's navigation system. Begin capturing charging revenue and elevated dwell time across the lot.
36 – 42 months
Phase 3 launch — vending operational
Install vending machines. Sons take operational ownership: tracking sales, restocking on visits, adjusting product mix. Full ecosystem running.
Year 4+
Expansion — second home & beyond
Evaluate second location, lot expansion, or Jacksonville second home acquisition anchored to the business. The platform is built; the decision is how to grow it.

What could go wrong, and how we're prepared

Wrong location
Poor traffic = poor parking and charging demand from day one
Rigorous site selection before acquisition. Phase 1 parking revenue validates demand before the much larger Phase 2 capital is deployed.
Tesla program changes
Tesla alters terms or scales back the Business program
Land and parking stand alone — they generate income with no dependency on Tesla. Other networks (EVgo, ChargePoint) can fill the gap if needed.
Distance from operations
White Plains to Jacksonville limits hands-on management
Automated systems handle 95% of operations. Sophie's family covers local presence. Only vending requires physical visits — handled on family trips.
Capital concentration
Significant capital tied to a single Jacksonville asset
Phased deployment means each decision is deliberate and data-informed. Phase 1 cash flow funds due diligence for Phase 2. No single large bet.
EV market slowdown
EV adoption stalls, reducing charging demand
Parking revenue is completely EV-agnostic and continues regardless. Florida EV growth is now incentive-free and organic — structurally more durable.

The bigger picture

Jax Park + Charge is not just a business. It is the foundation of the family's Jacksonville life.

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Path to a second home

Cash flow from all three streams offsets the carrying costs of a future Jacksonville property. When we buy, we arrive as established local business owners — not outside buyers with no local roots.

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Building for the next generation

The boys run vending in Phase 3. Over time: full site operations as teenagers, expansion decisions as young adults, and eventual equity in a real asset generating real cash flow.

The lessons learned here — margins, location quality, customer behavior, cash flow management, property ownership — are lessons that compound over a lifetime. We are not giving the boys a pretend business. We are giving them the operational layer of a real one.

"Jacksonville is not just where Sophie's family lives.
It is where our family is building something."