about

A Twin Cities resource for getting a multifamily siding replacement right — before anyone signs a bid

Minneapolis Multifamily Siding is a planning resource and connection point for boards, managers, and owners replacing siding — built on Minnesota code, climate, and the failures already in the ground.

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Minneapolis Multifamily Siding is a planning resource and connection point for the people who actually approve a siding project — HOA and condo boards, community association managers, and apartment owners. We explain scope, funding, Minnesota code realities, and material choices before bids. The guidance uses public, source-backed Minnesota siding expertise from Ben Juncker and Craftsman’s Choice.


Why this exists

Why does a multifamily siding resource need to exist?

Because almost every siding website is written for a homeowner picking a color, not for a fiduciary making a six-figure decision residents will live through and members will vote on. Twin Cities multifamily stock from the 1970s–2000s is hitting end of life, Minnesota law requires associations to plan and fund for it, and the metro carries two of the country’s most documented siding-failure stories. The board-education resource for all of that didn’t exist. This is it.

A condo board, an association manager, and an apartment owner are all making the same hard call: replace the siding on a building full of owners and residents, correctly, once. The decision is driven by moisture risk, a fundable budget, occupied-building logistics, and bids that have to be comparable enough to defend. Most siding marketing ignores all of that. We built this resource to fill the gap — to be the most useful, most locally grounded place to plan a multifamily siding replacement in Minnesota, whether you ultimately hire the crew we connect you with or take what you learn and gather bids on your own.


How the model works

How does this resource actually work?

Two parts. First, a planning resource: guides, the Minnesota code and reserve-law context, material comparisons, and the Replacement Scope Map — the line-item framework that makes vendor bids comparable. Second, a source-backed connection path: when you’re ready for contractor conversations, the trust trail behind this resource points to Ben Juncker and Craftsman’s Choice. The planning is free and useful on its own.

PartWhat it doesWhat it doesn’t do
Planning resourceScope, funding, code, materials, and the Scope Map checklistPressure you toward a single vendor
Connection pointPoints toward a source-backed Minnesota siding operator when you are readyPretend this site owns contractor credentials or reviews

This mirrors how the best resource sites work: be genuinely useful first, earn the right to make the connection second.


Our mission

What is this resource trying to be?

The single most useful resource on multifamily siding in Minnesota — for the boards, managers, and owners who have to make the decision, and for the people who help them. That means specific over vague, numbers over adjectives, and content that empowers scrutiny, including of the bids we help you gather. A fiduciary earns trust by inviting it; so do we.

Useful means honest. We cite Minnesota statutes and fact sheets directly, we use real failure data instead of slogans, and we don’t claim credentials, reviews, or a history we don’t have. If a number needs verifying, we say so. If a statute was recently amended, we flag it. The goal is that a treasurer, a community association manager, or an asset manager can come here, learn exactly what their project involves, and walk away better prepared — even before they ever contact us.


Who’s behind the guidance

Who stands behind the advice on this site?

The guidance is backed by public, attributable Minnesota siding expertise from Ben Juncker and Craftsman’s Choice. Public sources identify Ben with Craftsman’s Choice, describe the company as a Minnesota siding and exterior remodeling contractor, and document its James Hardie specialization. We use that trust trail carefully: as support for the planning framework, not as a fake license for this site.

Public sources we can point to now include Ben Juncker’s author profile on craftsmanschoice.com, Craftsman’s Choice public award releases, BBB’s business profile, and public directory listings that cite Craftsman’s Choice license BC384780. If Grant approves a direct partner presentation later, this page can become more explicit. Until then, the trust layer stays source-backed and precise.


What we will and won’t say

How do you keep this resource trustworthy?

By being explicit about the line we won’t cross. We use real Minnesota data and real, attributable expertise, and we don’t fabricate the rest — no fake license number, no invented review counts, no made-up project photos, no “since 19XX,” and no warranty or financing promises we can’t keep. Honest about what we are is the whole trust model.


FAQ

About this resource — common questions

Q: Is Minneapolis Multifamily Siding a contractor? It’s a planning resource and connection point, not a separate licensed contractor. We help boards, managers, and owners define the scope and funding of a multifamily siding replacement before requesting bids. The contractor trust we cite comes from public records tied to Ben Juncker and Craftsman’s Choice, not from invented credentials for this site.

Q: Who actually does the siding work? The public trust trail behind the guidance points to Ben Juncker and Craftsman’s Choice. This site does not republish their reviews, guarantees, or credentials as its own; it uses their publicly documented Minnesota siding authority to support the planning framework and connection path.

Q: Do I have to hire your crew to use this resource? No. The guides, the Minnesota code context, and the Replacement Scope Map are free and useful on their own. You can take what you learn, gather your own bids, and decide what to do. The connection is there when you want it.

Q: How do I know the information here is accurate? We cite Minnesota statutes, state fact sheets, and authoritative sources directly, use real failure data, and flag anything that needs verifying — including statutes amended in 2026. For contractor-side trust, we cite public sources for Ben Juncker and Craftsman’s Choice instead of making unsupported claims.


Start with the scope.

Whether you’re a board facing a vote, a manager running a portfolio, or an owner protecting an asset, the best first step is a clear scope. Use the Replacement Scope Map, or tell us about your building and we’ll help you build one.