**Replacing fascia/soffit on 1970s bungalow — how to deal with possible asbestos cement undercloak?**
I'm replacing the fascia and soffit on a 1970s bungalow. Along the verge there is what I believe is fibre cement undercloak beneath the tile ends, sitting on top of the bargeboard and bedded in mortar. The mortar is largely intact but the undercloak is broken in places. Given the age of the property I'm treating it as potentially asbestos cement.
My main concern is straightforward: I want to replace the fascia and soffit but I'm not sure how to handle the undercloak when I get to it.
A few things I'm uncertain about:
1. Is the undercloak likely to be attached to or resting on the fascia, and will removing the fascia disturb it?
2. If it stays intact when the fascia comes off, is leaving it in place an option — or does it need to come out regardless to do the job properly?
3. If it does need to come out, what's the right way to handle that — get it tested first, treat it as notifiable asbestos, or is non-licensed controlled removal sufficient for this type of material?
Happy to consider a dry verge finish if that's the sensible solution, but that's not the driving goal — I just want to understand what I'm getting into before I start pulling things apart.
I'm replacing the fascia and soffit on a 1970s bungalow. Along the verge there is what I believe is fibre cement undercloak beneath the tile ends, sitting on top of the bargeboard and bedded in mortar. The mortar is largely intact but the undercloak is broken in places. Given the age of the property I'm treating it as potentially asbestos cement.
My main concern is straightforward: I want to replace the fascia and soffit but I'm not sure how to handle the undercloak when I get to it.
A few things I'm uncertain about:
1. Is the undercloak likely to be attached to or resting on the fascia, and will removing the fascia disturb it?
2. If it stays intact when the fascia comes off, is leaving it in place an option — or does it need to come out regardless to do the job properly?
3. If it does need to come out, what's the right way to handle that — get it tested first, treat it as notifiable asbestos, or is non-licensed controlled removal sufficient for this type of material?
Happy to consider a dry verge finish if that's the sensible solution, but that's not the driving goal — I just want to understand what I'm getting into before I start pulling things apart.
