
WINDOW COMPANY MAPLE GROVE MN
Professional Window Replacement Services
You feel bad windows before you see them. A cold draft pouring through a closed window in winter. Condensation pooling on the sill every morning. Frost forming on the inside of the glass while your furnace runs nonstop. By the time most homeowners call us about their windows, they’ve been living with the problem for years — paying higher energy bills every month and avoiding the rooms where it’s worst.
Presidential Construction is a window company based right here in Maple Grove at 6885 Sycamore Ln N, Suite 220. We replace and install windows from Andersen, Pella, Marvin, Simonton, and Windsor in every major style and frame material. We’ve done window projects across this city — from the established homes near Weaver Lake where original windows from the ’80s and ’90s are long past their useful life, to newer builds in Rush Hollow and Evanswood where builder-grade units are already showing seal failure after a decade. If your windows aren’t performing, we’ll assess what you have, explain your options, and give you a clear price with no pressure.
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Maple Grove Window Projects
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Presidential Construction
office@presidentialconstructioninc.com
Nearby Service Areas
Areas We Serve Throughout Maple Grove
We install windows in every part of Maple Grove — from the original homes near Weaver Lake and the neighborhoods along Elm Creek Boulevard to the subdivisions off Bass Lake Road, Hemlock Lane, and County Road 101, through the Arbor Lakes corridor, and into the newer developments at Rush Hollow, Evanswood, and the Fish Lake area.
The window challenges shift depending on when the home was built. In the southern and central neighborhoods where homes went up in the ’70s and ’80s, we’re typically pulling out original single-pane or early double-pane units that stopped insulating years ago — homeowners in these areas are dealing with the worst drafts and the highest energy bills. The homes built through the ’90s and early 2000s along the eastern and central corridors have windows that are now 20-25 years old, right in the range where seal failures, fogging between panes, and hardware problems start compounding. In the newer northwest developments — Rush Hollow, Evanswood, and the areas near The Grove — the windows are younger but we’re already seeing builder-grade units with premature seal failure and operational issues that shouldn’t be happening this early. Townhome associations across the city deal with the added complexity of coordinating window replacements across multiple units while balancing individual owner preferences with association budgets and architectural guidelines.
We also serve homeowners in Plymouth, Osseo, Brooklyn Park, Champlin, Dayton, Corcoran, and Rogers.
Window Solutions We Provide in Maple Grove

Double Hung Windows
The most common window style in residential homes — and the one we install more than any other. Both sashes slide vertically, giving you airflow control from the top, the bottom, or both at once. Modern double-hung windows from Andersen and Simonton feature tilt-in sashes that let you clean the exterior glass from inside your home — no ladder required, even on the second floor. They seal tightly against air infiltration, operate smoothly for decades, and fit virtually every opening style found across Maple Grove’s housing stock.
For homeowners replacing original windows from the ’80s and ’90s, the upgrade to a modern double-hung is night and day. The drafts disappear, the operation is effortless, and the difference on your heating bill shows up immediately.

Casement Windows
The most common window style in residential homes — and the one we install more than any other. Both sashes slide vertically, giving you airflow control from the top, the bottom, or both at once. Modern double-hung windows from Andersen and Simonton feature tilt-in sashes that let you clean the exterior glass from inside your home — no ladder required, even on the second floor. They seal tightly against air infiltration, operate smoothly for decades, and fit virtually every opening style found across Maple Grove’s housing stock.
For homeowners replacing original windows from the ’80s and ’90s, the upgrade to a modern double-hung is night and day. The drafts disappear, the operation is effortless, and the difference on your heating bill shows up immediately.

Slider Windows
Sliders glide horizontally on a track — a practical, no-fuss option for wider openings where a crank-out or vertical sliding window doesn’t make sense. Basement egress, sunrooms, and rooms where the window sits above a countertop or walkway are the most common applications. There are no mechanical parts to freeze, jam, or wear out over time — just a clean horizontal motion with a multi-point lock for security.
We install sliders throughout Maple Grove, particularly in finished basements and lower-level walkouts where egress code compliance requires an operable window of a specific size. Simonton and Windsor both produce slider lines with low-profile frames that maximize glass area and let in more natural light than bulkier alternatives.

Specialty Windows
Not every window opening is a standard rectangle. Arched tops, geometric shapes, octagonal accents, and oversized picture windows all require custom sizing and precise installation to fit correctly and seal properly. We work with manufacturers who build to exact specifications so your specialty windows match your home’s architecture without compromising performance. Whether you’re replacing an existing specialty shape or adding one as part of a renovation, we measure every opening individually and verify fit before installation day.

Vinyl Windows
Vinyl is the most requested frame material we install — and for good reason. Modern multi-chamber, fusion-welded vinyl frames deliver strong thermal performance at a price point that makes whole-home replacement realistic for most budgets. They won’t rot, peel, or need repainting. Ever. Today’s premium vinyl from Simonton and Windsor is a completely different product than the thin-walled frames that went into homes 20 years ago. If your current windows are original builder-grade vinyl that’s already drafting and fogging, upgrading to modern vinyl is one of the fastest ways to improve comfort and cut energy costs.

Wood Windows
Wood frames bring a richness and warmth to your interior that other materials simply can’t match. There’s a reason homeowners who care about how a room feels — not just how it functions — keep choosing wood. We install wood windows from Marvin and Andersen that are factory-treated for moisture, rot, and insect resistance, with finishes that hold up far better than previous generations. Wood does require periodic maintenance, but for living rooms, dining rooms, and front-facing spaces where appearance matters, nothing else looks the same.

Composite Windows
Composite blends wood fibers with polymer resins to create a frame that’s stronger than either material alone. It won’t warp, swell, or rot through Minnesota’s extreme temperature swings — and it does all of this without asking for the maintenance that solid wood demands. Composite also dampens sound more effectively than vinyl, making it a smart choice for bedrooms facing busy streets or homes near major roads. It costs more than vinyl but less than wood, and delivers 30+ years of performance with virtually no upkeep.

Aluminum-Clad Windows
The best of both worlds — real wood on the inside for the look and feel you want in your living space, and aluminum on the outside to handle everything Minnesota throws at it. No scraping, no painting, no rot. The aluminum shell takes the weather while the wood interior stays warm and finished. Andersen and Marvin both produce aluminum-clad lines that perform exceptionally well through our freeze-thaw cycles. For homeowners who want wood character without ever thinking about exterior maintenance, clad is the answer.

Storm Damage Restoration
Hail doesn’t just damage roofs — it cracks window glass, dents aluminum cladding, and compromises seals that were working fine before the storm hit. Wind drives debris through panes and pushes pressure against frames until they fail. After a storm, we inspect every window on your home, document the damage with photos and detailed measurements, and manage your insurance claim from filing through final payment. We meet your adjuster on-site, identify damage that might be overlooked from the ground, and file supplements when the initial scope doesn’t cover everything.
Real Reviews from Real Homeowners
Why Maple Grove Homeowners Call Us for Windows
We’re already in your neighborhood. Our office is at 6885 Sycamore Ln N, Suite 220 — not across the metro, not out of state. When you have a question about your windows next winter, you’re not leaving a voicemail with a call center. You’re reaching a team that’s five minutes away.
We’ve replaced windows in every era of home this city has. Original single-pane units on ’70s ramblers near Weaver Lake. Failed double-pane windows from the ’90s along Elm Creek Boulevard. Builder-grade installs on 2010s homes near Fish Lake that are fogging and drafting a decade ahead of schedule. Every generation of Maple Grove construction has its own window issues, and we’ve learned where to look and what to recommend through years of hands-on experience in this city.
We don’t sell you a houseful of windows when you need five. If half your windows are still performing and the other half aren’t, we’ll replace what’s failing and leave the rest alone. If everything needs to go, we’ll explain why and help you phase the project if budget is a factor. The recommendation always comes from what we find during the assessment — not from a sales target.
We take the complexity out of insurance and permits. If storm damage cracked your glass or compromised your seals, we handle the documentation, meet your adjuster, and manage the claim from start to finish. We pull building permits through the City of Maple Grove and coordinate inspections so you don’t chase paperwork.
We back every installation. Your windows carry manufacturer warranties on materials and our TruShield Limited Lifetime Workmanship Warranty on the labor and installation. If an issue comes up down the road, you’re not tracking down an installer who’s moved on to the next city — you’re calling a company that’s right here.
Our Roofing Process
1
Free In-Home Assessment
We check every window you’re concerned about — glass condition, seal integrity, frame soundness, hardware function, weatherstripping, and air leakage. We measure each opening and look for signs of moisture damage or rot in the surrounding framing that isn’t visible with the window in place. Takes about an hour, and you walk away knowing exactly where things stand.
2
Estimate and Material Selection
We walk you through options from Andersen, Pella, Marvin, Simonton, and Windsor and recommend what makes sense for each opening based on orientation, room function, and your budget.
3
Scheduling and Permits
Once you approve the estimate, we lock in your installation date and handle all permitting through the City of Maple Grove. If your project involves an insurance claim, we coordinate the timeline between claim approval and installation so there’s no gap where your home sits with damaged windows waiting on paperwork.
4
Professional Installation
We work one opening at a time — old window out, new window in, insulated with expanding foam, sealed with flashing tape and caulk, and interior trim completed before we move to the next. Your home is never exposed for more than a few minutes per window. We protect your floors, furniture, and walls around every opening, and test each unit for smooth operation and proper locking before moving on. Most whole-home projects take one to three days.
5
Warranty and Documentation
Every window job we install is also backed by our TruShield Limited Lifetime Workmanship Warranty, which covers the labor and installation for as long as you own your home.
Window Issues That We See Often
We’ve assessed thousands of windows across this city. These are the problems that show up most often — and the ones that cost homeowners the most when they go unaddressed.
Fogging between the panes with no way to fix it. When the seal between two panes of glass fails, moisture gets trapped inside the insulated glass unit and there’s no repair. The window looks cloudy, the insulating gas is gone, and the thermal performance drops significantly. We see this on windows 15-20 years old throughout Maple Grove — and on some builder-grade units that are barely a decade old. Once a seal fails, replacement is the only path back to a window that actually insulates.
Drafts that no amount of weatherstripping fixes. Homeowners try foam tape, rope caulk, plastic film kits — anything to stop the cold air coming through. The problem is usually deeper than weatherstripping. Frames warp over years of thermal cycling. Sash hardware loosens so the window no longer compresses against the frame. The window itself may have shifted in the rough opening as the house settled. At a certain point, no amount of aftermarket sealing fixes a window that’s structurally past its ability to perform.
Energy bills that climb a little more every winter. This one creeps up slowly. Your furnace runs a little longer each season. You bump the thermostat up a degree, then another. You don’t connect it to your windows because there’s no single dramatic failure — just a gradual decline in insulating performance across multiple units. Older windows can account for 25-30% of a home’s total heat loss. Replacing them often produces a measurable drop on the very next utility statement.
Condensation feeding mold in frame corners. When interior glass gets cold enough, it pulls moisture out of the room air and deposits it on the glass surface and frame. That standing moisture creates the perfect environment for mold growth — especially in bathrooms, kitchens, and any room with higher humidity. New windows with low-E coatings keep the interior glass surface warmer, which breaks the condensation cycle entirely.
Windows that were fine ten years ago but shouldn’t be failing yet. Some of Maple Grove’s 2005-2015 construction used the most basic window product available to meet code at the lowest cost. Those units are now showing problems — seal failure, hardware that won’t lock, frames that have shifted — that premium windows don’t develop for another 15 years. If your home is newer but your windows are already giving you trouble, the product quality was the issue from the start.
More Than Glass and Frames — What Your Windows Actually Do
Your windows are part of your home’s thermal envelope. They regulate how much heat moves in and out of every room. They control moisture, block noise, and let in natural light. When they’re doing their job well, you don’t think about them. When they’re not, you feel it in every room they touch — cold spots near exterior walls, frost on the glass, rooms you avoid in winter because they’re never comfortable.
The financial impact is measurable. New windows cut heating costs by 15-30% on average compared to aging or failed units. In a climate where you’re running the furnace from October through April, those savings compound year over year. And in Maple Grove’s housing market, window condition is one of the details that shows up on every inspection report. Fogged panes and visible condensation signal deferred maintenance to buyers — and they use it to negotiate your price down. New windows recoup 65-75% of the project cost in added property value and remove a negotiating lever that can cost you far more than the windows themselves.
What New Windows Cost in Maple Grove
Here’s where window pricing stands for Maple Grove homes in 2026.
Vinyl windows run $1400 to $2800 per window installed. Composite frames range from $1700 to $3,200. Wood and aluminum-clad windows fall between $2800 and $4,500 per unit. For a full-home replacement of 8-15 windows, most projects total between $18,000 and $45,000 depending on the number of openings, frame material, glass package, and the condition of the existing framing.
What pushes a project toward the higher end is usually a combination of non-standard window sizes that require custom ordering, rotted or water-damaged framing discovered when the old window comes out, specialty shapes like arches or geometric configurations, and multi-story homes where upper-floor access adds installation complexity.
Every estimate we write is free, detailed, and broken down window by window so you can see exactly what each unit costs and why. No bundled pricing, no vague allowances, no surprise charges after the work is done. (Pricing updated for 2026.)
Other Services We Offer In
Maple Grove
Seasonal
Roofing
Protecting everything underneath
- Asphalt
- Hail-Resistant
- Metal
Year-Round
Siding
Protecting everything underneath
- Vinyl
- Metal
- LP Smartside
Year-Round
Gutters
Enhancing homes with modern solutions
- Seamless Aluminum
- Downspouts
- Water Management
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my windows need replacing?
The most reliable signs are fogging or condensation between the panes (meaning the seal has failed), drafts you can feel around closed windows, difficulty opening or closing due to warped frames or broken hardware, frost forming on interior glass during winter, and energy bills that keep climbing without explanation. If your windows are 20+ years old and showing more than one of these symptoms, replacement is almost always more cost-effective than repairing individual units.
What window brands do you install?
We work with Andersen, Pella, Marvin, Simonton, and Windsor. Each brand has strengths depending on the style, frame material, and budget. Andersen and Marvin excel in wood and aluminum-clad options. Pella produces strong casement lines. Simonton and Windsor are top choices for premium vinyl. We help you choose based on your specific home and priorities.
How much do new windows cost?
For a typical Maple Grove home, vinyl windows run $1400-$1800 per window installed. Wood and aluminum-clad range from $2800-$4,500. A full-home replacement of 8-15 windows generally falls between $18,000 and $45,000 depending on material, glass package, and whether framing repairs are needed. We provide free, itemized estimates so you know exactly what to expect. (Pricing updated for 2026.)
How much can new windows save on heating bills?
Most homeowners see a 15-30% reduction in heating costs after replacing old or failing windows. The biggest savings come from homes still running original single-pane glass or early double-pane units from the ’80s and ’90s. Modern double or triple-pane windows with low-E coatings and argon gas create a dramatically better thermal barrier. In a climate where you’re heating six months out of the year, those savings add up fast.
Can windows be replaced during winter?
Yes. We swap one opening at a time — old window out, new window in, insulated and sealed before moving to the next. Your home is never exposed for more than a few minutes per window. Modern sealants and expanding foams perform in cold temperatures. If your windows are actively failing, waiting months for warm weather means months of higher energy bills and potential moisture damage that could have been prevented.
What’s the difference between full-frame replacement and pocket insert?
Full-frame removes the entire old window including the frame, exposing the rough opening for inspection, insulation, and new flashing. Pocket insert slides a new window into the existing frame. Full-frame is the better option whenever possible because it lets us see and repair hidden rot, ensure proper insulation, and start fresh. Pocket inserts only make sense when the existing frame is structurally sound with no moisture damage — something we verify during the assessment.
How long does a window replacement project take?
Most full-home replacements take one to three days depending on the number of windows and whether framing repairs are needed. A single window takes about an hour. We schedule around weather when possible and protect interior spaces throughout the project.
Do I need a building permit for window replacement?
Yes. The City of Maple Grove requires a building permit for window replacements. We handle the entire permitting process — application, submission, and inspection coordination. You don’t deal with any of the paperwork.
Does insurance cover windows damaged by storms?
If your windows were damaged by a covered event — hail, wind, falling debris — your policy typically covers replacement minus your deductible. We inspect, document every point of damage, meet your adjuster on-site, and file supplements when initial estimates fall short. Window damage is often part of a larger exterior claim that includes roof and siding, so we document the full picture to make sure nothing gets missed.
What ENERGY STAR specs should I look for?
For our climate zone, look for a U-factor of 0.27 or lower and a Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC) of 0.40 or lower. Windows meeting these thresholds qualify for ENERGY STAR certification. All the products we recommend meet or exceed these standards.
Is it worth replacing windows and siding at the same time?
If both systems are nearing end-of-life, doing them together produces the best result. The flashing details where windows meet siding are critical waterproofing connections. When both are done by the same crew at the same time, those transitions get integrated properly. You also save on labor and the finished product looks cohesive. We coordinate multi-service projects regularly.
Will new windows reduce road noise?
Noticeably. Modern double and triple-pane windows with gas fills provide significantly better sound dampening than older single or failed double-pane units. Composite and wood frames absorb more sound than vinyl. If you’re near I-94, I-694, County Road 30, or Maple Grove Parkway, we can recommend specific glass and frame combinations with enhanced acoustic ratings.





