It's a management platform, I see that.
Power is always over-subscribed. As the number of subscriptions goes up demand peaking becomes less volatile. 1000 apartments with 100A service is not going to get 100,000A @ 240v of service (24MW) all to itself, it is already shared (and monitored) by the power company. There is nothing "Theoretical" about a load ceiling, it is a physical limit. If I run 1000MCM to a complex, the wire is rated at 800A direct burial. That is a hard limit for the infrastructure to that grid. Assuming that is for a 480v 3-phase feed I have a physically constrained max load of 384KW. It isn't theory, exceeding that limit will overheat the wire and could cause a fire. The power company is monitoring the big *** 480V 800A 3-phase transformer, and knows pretty much, how much power it is drawing give or take a percentage or two, and brings capacity on and offline to feed the thing as demand shifts. Do you think they just kick all the power generation they have on full blast and see what gets used? All that rhetoric sounds swell, but power generation and distribution has simply defined hard limits and capacity numbers. There aren't any 'extra' electrons floating around in one grid that you can float over to another to take advantage of. You have to either generate it or store it for delivery later.
Further, your still running fat wire to a service panel somewhere thru some conduit, so I'm not sure what the 'space-constraint' angle is about. The current large charging pedestals are that way because they are outside and exposed to the elements. I've seen smaller ChargePoint DCFC's deployed in interior spaces/parking garages, I can assure you they are monitored, and the power company can shut them down under high demand if they need to. You can't 'retrofit' your way into a bigger feed cable and transformer. If your feed cable and transformer will already handle the load, then you are just adding wire and switching, and I still don't see where the 'bi-directional' comes in unless you are digging up the floor/street or running even more conduit and wire to shuffle the electrons between the various power grids. Nothing wrong with that, neither is it innovative or a particlarly novel approach.
Thus I conclude this is just another company with a gimmicky management platform that wants to get into the EV charging game. I don't really see anything particlarly novel in the approach rather just a fresh application of what other folks are already doing. If you see something I don't you can invest, I see another Soylyndra.