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- 12 Jan 2020
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I have a lean-to utility room (extension to Victorian terrace, but has actually been there for a long long time) is being refurbished. There are ceramic tiles over a concrete floor.
I had an asbestos refurbishment survey done which lifted one of the ceramic tiles and found black adhesive but not vinyl tiles. The adhesive tested negative, all good. Today the builders started and took out some kitchen units. The ceramic tiles don’t go all the way under the units, and where they stop there are actually some vinyl tiles on top of the concrete. This can only be seen easily now the kitchen unit is gone - where the surveyor actually lifted the ceramic tiles it was just the adhesive left. Whether they should have looked under the unit is a different issue.
Question 1, and I know this can only be answered through testing - is it likely that the adhesive would not contain asbestos but the tiles could? Luckily the builders aren’t actually meant to be doing anything to the floor in terms of disturbing the tiles, but they are now exposed and looking a little worse for wear.
Question 2. The ceramic tiles are not in great shape but weren’t actually going to be replaced as part of this work. Now I have a situation where there are multiple levels in the flooring. I know that if they are asbestos they can be sealed and left in-situ, but how would you deal with the junction between the ceramic tiles and lower vinyl tiles? The finished floor doesn’t have to be perfect - there can be a mismatch in colour etc.. But I don’t want it to just fail at the junction of two different surfaces.
I had an asbestos refurbishment survey done which lifted one of the ceramic tiles and found black adhesive but not vinyl tiles. The adhesive tested negative, all good. Today the builders started and took out some kitchen units. The ceramic tiles don’t go all the way under the units, and where they stop there are actually some vinyl tiles on top of the concrete. This can only be seen easily now the kitchen unit is gone - where the surveyor actually lifted the ceramic tiles it was just the adhesive left. Whether they should have looked under the unit is a different issue.
Question 1, and I know this can only be answered through testing - is it likely that the adhesive would not contain asbestos but the tiles could? Luckily the builders aren’t actually meant to be doing anything to the floor in terms of disturbing the tiles, but they are now exposed and looking a little worse for wear.
Question 2. The ceramic tiles are not in great shape but weren’t actually going to be replaced as part of this work. Now I have a situation where there are multiple levels in the flooring. I know that if they are asbestos they can be sealed and left in-situ, but how would you deal with the junction between the ceramic tiles and lower vinyl tiles? The finished floor doesn’t have to be perfect - there can be a mismatch in colour etc.. But I don’t want it to just fail at the junction of two different surfaces.
