Service · 02
Asbestos
Abatement.
When full removal is not required or not practical, abatement lets you safely manage asbestos in place — keeping your property compliant and your occupants protected.
Removal vs. Abatement
"Removal" and "abatement" get used interchangeably, but they are not the same thing. Removal means physically taking the asbestos-containing material off the property. Abatement is the broader category — it includes removal, but also encapsulation (sealing it in place) and enclosure (building a permanent barrier around it).
Sometimes the smartest, safest, and most cost-effective path is not to remove at all. If the material is in good condition and not going to be disturbed, encapsulating it can save you thousands while keeping everyone safe.
When Abatement Makes Sense
- ✓
Stable, Intact Material
If asbestos-containing material is not damaged and is in a location where it will not be disturbed, encapsulation is often the right call.
- ✓
Long-Term Management Plans
Larger commercial buildings often have asbestos management plans — we execute them, document them, and help keep you in compliance.
- ✓
Budget-Conscious Projects
Full removal is the gold standard, but not every project has the budget for it. Abatement gives you a safe, legal alternative.
- ✓
Phased Renovations
If you are renovating a building in stages, we can abate only the areas being worked on and leave the rest sealed until you are ready.
Our Abatement Methods
When we handle an abatement project, we bring the same containment, air monitoring, and documentation standards we use on full removal jobs. The work may be different — but the safety protocol never changes.
Encapsulation coatings, lock-down sealants, rigid enclosures, and combination strategies — we pick the approach that fits your building, your budget, and your long-term plan.
Ready to Start?
Free on-site estimate.
No obligation.
Call us directly, or submit a form and we'll get back to you within a few hours.