HOAs, condo associations, apartment communities, and commercial buildings all run into the same problem: multiple roofs, multiple vendors, and no real record of what got done where. JNR walks the whole property, bids every building, and emails a photo report for each one — so the file speaks for itself when a board or owner asks.

Every roof JNR services — house or 40-unit complex — gets a full inspection, and the photos go straight to your inbox. For a single homeowner that's a nice-to-have. For a property manager, it's the difference between a real record and a memory of what a crew said they did.
When a board member asks "did they actually service Building C" or an owner questions why their unit's roof looks different from the one next door, you've got a dated, per-building photo report to point to instead of a phone call to Jesse trying to remember. That report is also exactly what a reserve study or a vendor file wants — condition photos, dated, tied to one address.
We don't bundle a portfolio into one vague "roofs cleaned" summary. Each building gets its own report, because each roof is its own asset with its own paper trail.
Instead of chasing down a different roofer for every building on a property — and reconciling a different invoice from each one — JNR services the whole portfolio in one relationship: one estimate that covers every roof, one crew moving building to building on a scheduled pass, and one invoice at the end instead of a stack of them.
Roof cleaning is legally required to carry workers' comp under one of the highest-risk class codes there is — it's height work, and the premiums reflect that. JNR pays those premiums. A crew that's skipping them can quote lower, but if someone gets hurt on a shared roof, an underinsured vendor turns into the property's headache, not just theirs.
Condos, apartments, townhomes, garages, duplexes, triplexes, manufactured homes, full commercial buildings — JNR works on all of it, including steep roofs that need proper tie-off gear rather than a shortcut. Great work isn't cheap, and cheap work isn't great, especially at height.
One visit covers every building on the property — every roof gets looked at, so nothing gets missed because it wasn't on the original list.
Each roof gets its own condition assessment and its own line on the bid, so the board or office can see exactly what each building needs — and phase the work if that's how the budget has to work.
The crew moves building to building on a set schedule, instead of the property re-quoting and re-booking every roof as a separate job.
Once a building's roof is done, its report — with photos — goes to your inbox. Not a combined summary for the whole property, a dated record for that specific building.
Send us your property or portfolio and we'll walk every building, price it as one job, and give you documentation your board can actually use.