When the failure is localized — a leaking elevation, swelling board on one building, rot around windows — the question is whether to repair or replace. A good repair goes after what actually caused the leak: the water-resistive barrier, flashing, and sheathing behind the cladding. Patching the visible panel over a wet wall just delays a bigger bill.
Repair or replace?
Should you repair the siding or replace it?
Repair makes sense when the failure is genuinely localized and the rest of the cladding has real life left; replacement makes sense when the same material is failing across the building, when the wall system behind it was never detailed correctly, or when repairs keep recurring. The deciding factor is rarely the panel — it’s whether the water-resistive barrier and flashing are sound.
| Lean toward repair | Lean toward replacement |
|---|---|
| Damage is isolated (impact, one elevation) | Same failure recurring building-wide |
| Surrounding siding has years of life left | Cladding is at or past end of life |
| WRB and flashing are intact behind the failure | Original wall detailing was the cause |
| Material is still available to match | Discontinued or class-action material (LP Inner-Seal) |
A deeper decision framework lives at /guides/multifamily-siding-replacement/repair-vs-replace-multifamily-siding/.
What envelope repair actually means
What’s included in an exterior envelope repair?
Envelope repair addresses the water-management layer, not just the finish. That means removing siding around the failure, inspecting and replacing wet or rotted sheathing, repairing or reinstalling the water-resistive barrier, correcting window, door, and kick-out flashing, and reinstalling cladding so water is shed away from the wall. The siding is the last layer applied, not the fix itself.
A real envelope repair scope includes:
- Selective tear-off around the failure to expose the wall
- Sheathing and framing inspection, with rot/repair allowances
- Water-resistive barrier repair or replacement, lapped correctly
- Flashing correction at windows, doors, and roof-wall intersections (kick-out flashing)
- Trim and penetration sealing
- Matching cladding reinstallation and a documented close-out
Why Minnesota walls fail here
Why do Twin Cities walls leak in the first place?
Minnesota’s freeze-thaw cycling, wind-driven rain, and wet springs punish any gap in the water-management layer. The state’s stucco moisture crisis is the proof: a Woodbury study found 418 of 670 homes failed and were repaired within a decade — a 62% failure rate averaging 9.8 years — driven largely by window, door, and flashing detailing (Mitchell Hamline).
LP’s Inner-Seal hardboard composite (1985–1995) is the other common culprit. The defect drove a national class action covering roughly 130,000 claims, including a Minnesota case spanning about 2,600 buildings and a $13.2M settlement, with payouts tied to swelling and delamination (Justia — In re Louisiana Pacific Inner-Seal). Minnesota’s re-siding code requires a continuous water-resistive barrier and kick-out flashing for exactly this reason, and inspectors check them (MN DLI).
Reviewed against public source material from Ben Juncker and Craftsmans Choice, without presenting their contractor credentials as this sites own.
The hidden-rot problem
What happens when there’s more rot than expected?
On older Twin Cities buildings, the damage under the siding is almost always larger than what’s visible. A serious repair scope carries a sheathing and rot-repair allowance and a change-order process defined in advance, so finding wet framing doesn’t stall the project or trigger a surprise invoice. A quote with no rot allowance isn’t a bargain — it just hasn’t priced the part you can’t see yet.
For how allowances and change orders should be written, see /guides/managing-the-project/change-orders-and-hidden-rot-conditions/.
FAQ
Multifamily siding & envelope repair — common questions
Q: Can you just replace the siding on one building or one elevation? Yes, if the failure is localized and the rest of the cladding has real remaining life. But the repair has to address the wall behind the siding — the water-resistive barrier and flashing — or the leak comes back. Matching discontinued material can also push the decision toward fuller replacement.
Q: How do we know if there’s rot behind the siding? Often you can’t fully tell until siding is removed, which is why a repair scope should include a sheathing/rot-repair allowance and a defined change-order process. On 1980s–90s buildings with LP composite or failed stucco, assume some hidden damage and budget for it.
Q: Is repairing cheaper than replacing? Per-square-foot, yes — but only if the repair genuinely fixes the cause. A patch over an intact wall is cost-effective; a patch over a wet, poorly flashed wall is the most expensive option because you pay twice. Repair vs. replace should be decided on the wall condition, not the panel.
Q: Does this site do the repair work itself? No — we’re a Minnesota multifamily siding and envelope-repair planning resource, not a licensed contractor. We help owners and managers diagnose the failure and scope the repair, then help them enter contractor conversations with a comparable, defensible scope.
Get an honest repair-vs-replace read before you spend.
Tell us where the failure is and what you’re seeing — leaks, swelling, rot, stains — and we’ll help you figure out whether it’s a targeted envelope repair or a sign the building is due for replacement.