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InspectAPedia ® Home ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS - INSPECT, TEST, REMEDY ACOUSTICAL SEALANT CHOICES AGE of a BUILDING - how to determine AIR BYPASS LEAKS AIR LEAK DETECTION TOOLS AIR LEAK MINIMIZATION AIR LEAK SEALING PROCEDURE AIR POLLUTANTS, COMMON INDOOR ALLERGENS in BUILDINGS, RECOGNIZING ANIMAL ALLERGENS / PET DANDER APPLIANCE EFFICIENCY RATINGS ARCHITECTURE & BUILDING COMPONENT ID ASBESTOS CEILING TILES, Asbestos-Containing ASBESTOS CEMENT ROOFING ASBESTOS CEMENT SIDING ASBESTOS DUCTS, HVAC ASBESTOS FLOORING HAZARD REDUCTION ASBESTOS-FREE INSULATION MATERIALS ASBESTOS IDENTIFICATION IN buildings ASBESTOS AIR DUCTS Asbestos Air Duct Vibration Dampers ASBESTOS in CARPETING, PADDING ASBESTOS CEILING TILES, Asbestos-Containing ASBESTOS DUCTS, HVAC ASBESTOS DUCT INSULATION, Asbestos Paper ASBESTOS DUCTS, Transite Pipe ASBESTOS FIREPROOFING SPRAY-On Coatings ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE IDENTIFICATION ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE LAB PROCEDURES ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE PHOTO ID GUIDE Asbestos Foamed-Over ASBESTOS INSULATION ASBESTOS PAPER DUCT INSULATION ASBESTOS PIPE INSULATION ASBESTOS ROOFING, CEMENT & FIBER CEMENT ASBESTOS ROOFING / SIDING POWER WASHING ASBESTOS ROOFING / SIDING DUST ASBESTOS CEMENT SIDING Asbestos vs. fiber-cement Maintenance & Repair Asbestos Cement Shingles OSHA Regulations, Asbestos Roofing, Siding Painting Cement Asbestos Siding Remove & Replace Asbestos Cement Shingles Re-Sale Issues - Cement Asbestos siding Siding over asbestos cement Sources of Replacements for Asbestos Cement Shingles Tools to Cut Fiber Cement Shingles Wear signs on cement asbestos walls ASBESTOS in UNUSUAL PLACES ASPHALT-ASBESTOS FELT Flooring ASPHALT-ASBESTOS PAINT / SEALANT CERAMIC TILE, ASBESTOS in? TRANSITE PIPE AIR DUCTS TRANSITE PIPE CHIMNEYS / FLUES TRANSITE PIPE WATER SUPPLY VERMICULITE INSULATION ASBESTOS FLOORING HAZARD REDUCTION ASBESTOS FLOORING REMOVAL GUIDE ASBESTOS LIST of PRODUCTS ASBESTOS MATERIAL REGULATIONS ASBESTOS MATERIAL REGULATIONS Update ASBESTOS MATERIAL REGULATIONS, OSHA ASBESTOS PHOTO GUIDE to Materials ASBESTOS REMOVAL, Amateur, Incomplete Asbestos Removal, Certification ASBESTOS REMOVAL, Wetting Guidelines ASBESTOS RISK ASSESSMENT Asbestos Under the Microscope ATTIC LEAKS, CONDENSATION & MOLD ATTIC VENTILATION BASEMENT HEAT LOSS BASEMENT WATERPROOFING BLOWN-IN INSULATION BUCKLED FOUNDATIONS due to INSULATION? BUILDING NOISE DIAGNOSIS & CURE CATHEDRAL CEILING INSULATION CEILING FINISHES INTERIOR CEILINGS, DROP or SUSPENDED PANEL CEILINGS, PLASTER TYPES CERAMIC TILE FLOOR, WALL CERAMIC TILE, ASBESTOS in? CHIMNEY INSPECTION DIAGNOSIS & REPAIR CHINESE DRYWALL HAZARDS CRAWL SPACES DEHUMIDIFICATION PROBLEMS DEW POINT CALCULATION for WALLS EFFLORESCENCE, Salts & White / Brown Deposits FIBERGLASS INSULATION FIBERGLASS HAZARDS FIBERGLASS INSULATION MOLD FLOOR TILE HISTORY & INGREDIENTS FLOOR TILES ASBESTOS FLOOR TYPES & DEFECTS FOUNDATION WATERPROOFING HEAT LOSS in BUILDINGS HOUSE DOCTOR, how-to be HUMIDITY LEVEL TARGET ICE DAM PREVENTION INDOOR AIR QUALITY IMPROVEMENT GUIDE INSULATION CHOICES INSULATION FACT SHEET- DOE INSULATION IDENTIFICATION GUIDE INSULATION MOLD INSULATION R-Values & Properties METAL LATH, PLASTER & STUCCO METHANE GAS SOURCES MOISTURE CONTROL in BUILDINGS MOLD: A COMPLETE GUIDE TO MOLD Museum Artifact Preservation Nanomaterials Hazards NOISE / SOUND DIAGNOSIS & CURE ODORS & SMELLS DIAGNOSIS & CURE PAINT FALURE, DIAGNOSIS, CURE, PREVENTION PLASTER & BEAVERBOARD & DRYWALL PLASTER BULGES & PILLOWS PLASTER LATH, METAL PLASTER, LOOSE FALL HAZARDS PLASTER TYPE IDENTIFICATION PLASTER VENEER Best Practices RADIANT BARRIERS RADIANT HEAT ROOF VENTILATION SPECIFICATIONS SAFETY HAZARDS & INSPECTIONS SEARS KIT HOUSES SOUND CONTROL in buildings Splits in Structural Wood Beams STAIN DIAGNOSIS on BUILDING EXTERIORS STAIN DIAGNOSIS on BUILDING INTERIORS STUCCO WALL METHODS & INSTALLATION STRUCTURAL DAMAGE PROBING SWEATING (CONDENSATION) on PIPES, TANKS Thermal Expansion Cracking of Brick THERMAL EXPANSION of MATERIALS THERMAL IMAGING, THERMOGRAPHY THERMAL MASS in BUILDINGS THERMAL TRACKING Indicates Heat Loss VAPOR BARRIERS & CONDENSATION in BUILDINGS VENTILATION in BUILDINGS VINYL CHLORIDE HEALTH INFO Volatile Organic Compounds VOCs WALL CONSTRUCTION BARRIER vs CAVITY WATER ENTRY in buildings WINDOWS & DOORS WINTERIZE A BUILDING WOOD Burning Heaters Fireplaces Stoves World Trade Center Collapse Dust Photos More Information |
Dust hazards from asbestos cement siding or roofing demolition or removal: this article discusses potential asbestos-dust hazards from power-sawing cement-asbestos siding materials. For a similar asbestos-SNAFU case see Asbestos Roof Power Washing. This document series assists building buyers, owners or inspectors who need to identify asbestos materials (or probable-asbestos) in buildings by simple visual inspection. In the website sections listed below, we provide photographs and descriptive text of asbestos insulation and other asbestos-containing products to permit identification of definite, probable, or possible asbestos materials in buildings. Green links show where you are. © Copyright 2013 InspectAPedia.com, All Rights Reserved. Author Daniel Friedman. Asbestos Dust Hazards from Cement-asbestos Wall Shingles or Roofing ProductsIs it safe to buy a home with cement asbestos siding? Most cementious building materials are considered to be non-friable, and are probably less hazardous than other friable asbestos products such as asbestos pipe insulation. However removal of asbestos-containing roofing products is regulated as we discuss at ACRM Roofing Disposal Regs.
Question: I was sawing cement asbestos wall siding - should I be worried?I was helping an older gentleman fix a screen door that was brushing the siding of the over hang of his house. I just got a saw and trimmed a quarter inch off of a 4 foot section ....later it came to my mind that it was likely cement asbestos type siding...loks just like the picture you have that is pointing to the siding. The cutting was overhead and dust and debris was flying. I did not wear a mask ...I didn't realize it was that type siding. Should I be concerned? Or is it long term exposure that would typically be more of an issue? I would appreciate any feedback you can give me. - M.S. Reply: Maybe ..For an accurate answer to your question of whether or not you exposed yourself (and anyone else nearby) you'd need to:
So really we don't know the answer. Very acute exposure to high levels of asbestos containing dust, such as workers at the world trade center collapse on 9/11/01, indeed has led to health problems for those individuals, as has been much in the news. A different example of hazardous dust exposure that was serious was that of workers in industry or shipyards who were exposed to high levels of dust (less than the WTC collapse) over long periods of time. A short exposure to low dust levels may not produce a measurable effect on someone. For example, asbestosis among contractors who installed asbestos-insulated heating piping has not been widely reported, while asbestosis among shipyard workers, workers in brake shoe factories, and emergency workers at the 9/11 site has been a concern. We can suggest several steps:
Background On Asbestos Dust HazardsAs we discuss at ASBESTOS CEMENT SIDING: How can we tell the difference between asbestos-containing shingles and fiber-cement wall shingles?It's tricky. But here are some ways to distinguish between asbestos containing shingles and non-asbestos fiber-cement shingles:
If an asbestos-cement sided home has been re-modeled such as by adding a window or door, it's likely that the old asbestos cement shingles were broken around that new opening during the construction work - expect to see newer fiber cement shingles there.
What are the asbestos dust hazards created during demolition or removal of cement asbestos siding or shingle siding materials?The risk of high levels of airborne asbestos from cementious products is probably very low unless the workers are using power equipment like sanders and saws on these substances. Using cement asbestos roofing products as an example, according to NRCA, the National Roofing Contractors' Association, their studies up to February 1992 had not found a single roofing job at which these limits were exceeded, and NRCA reported that in some cases no fiber release was detected. But it appears that the association may have been referring only to asphalt-based roofing materials, not jobs involving the demolition of other ACRM such as cement-asbestos roof shingles (or "asbestos roof tiles" as some consumers refer to them) which might produce different statistics. See ASBESTOS MATERIAL REGULATIONS and ASBESTOS REGULATION Update that address the handling of asbestos containing building materials, including ACM (asbestos containing materials), PACM (presumed asbestos containing materials), SACM (suspect asbestos containing materials), and ACRM (asbestos containing roofing materials). Also see other cementious siding materials such as JamesHardie HardiePlank Siding (also see Hardie's Fibrolite™ or Fibro where used in Australia) and cementious roofing materials such ASBESTOS CEMENT ROOFING and Corrugated Cement-Asbestos Roofing. Also see Environmental Issues - Asbestos Roofing/Siding. Readers should also see SIDING TYPES, INSTALLATION, DEFECTS. A common remodeling practice is to install new vinyl or aluminum siding over cement asbestos shingle siding as well as over many other older siding materials when the old siding has become damaged, leaky, or cosmetically ugly. A typical procedure is to install furring strips on the existing wall, avoiding breaking the existing siding. The new siding is then secured to the furring strips so that the new wall siding will be smooth and flat. Please see Siding over asbestos cement for r the full article on this topic. Additional steps may be needed to build out window and door trim for aesthetic reasons - so that the windows and doors do not appear to "recede" into the walls of the structure. What about replacing the cement asbestos siding or roofing ? Can you side over the existing asbestos cement siding or roof over cement asbestos roofing or does it need to be removed? It is very difficult to remove individual broken asbestos-cement wall or roof shingles, but working carefully it can be done. Work by an inexperienced contractor can ruin a cement asbestos shingle wall siding and lead to complete replacement that could have been avoidable. Please see Remove & Replace Asbestos Cement Shingles for the full article on this topic. ... Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) about dust hazards from asbestos-cement siding or roofing... Ask a Question or Search InspectApediaQuestions & answers or comments about dust hazards from removal or demolition of cement asbestos roofing or siding. Ask a Question or Enter Search Terms in the InspectApedia search box just below. Technical Reviewers & ReferencesRelated Topics, found near the top of this page suggest articles closely related to this one.
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