The Marvin Companies on Monday took advantage of a non-game day at Target Field to use a VIP club at the ballpark for its official launch of a new building product that marks the manufacturer's first expansion beyond windows and doors.
The product, called Apex, uses Ultrex, a patented super-tough fiberglass material that Warroad, Minn.-based Marvin already uses for its Integrity and Infinity brand windows. The 98-year-old company still makes wood and clad wood windows and doors but expanded into fiberglass about 20 years ago.
Unlike fiberglass siding panels produced by other companies, mostly for farm buildings, Marvin said Apex is the first fiberglass siding that can be installed on a house in overlapping boards that look like traditional siding.
About 200 area building professionals gathered in the Champions Club, a plush venue tucked just behind the new ballpark's home plate. They chowed on prime rib and prosciutto-wrapped asparagus, saw the new product and visited with Marvin officials, celebrity home improvement expert Lou Manfredini, and Brad Hanson, whose Hanson Building Materials of Ramsey is currently the only Apex distributor.
Marvin plans to roll the product out gradually nationwide. It now has about 4,500 retail dealers for its windows and doors. President Susan Marvin said it won't use the same dealer network for Apex but instead will partner with distributors like Hanson that specialize in siding.
Susan Marvin said the new siding is part of a larger strategy to leverage the company's brand name into a range of building products. She declined to say what they might be but said they would be geared to the upper tier of the building supply market.
Marvin also isn't daunted by bringing out the new product even as the home building market remains far off its peak from a few years ago.
"We actually think the timing is perfect," she said. "Contractors are looking for ways to differentiate themselves from their competitors. People who are buying or remodeling homes are looking for value, and by that I don't mean something at the lowest price."