Apex has grown faster than almost any town in the state for the last decade, and the older inventory feeding that growth — 1960s ranches, 70s split-levels, mid-century brick — is routinely bought, renovated, and listed inside three months. Those properties are also where popcorn ceilings, vinyl floor tile, mastic, and pipe insulation still live.
Once a sample comes back positive, removal is no longer a renovation question. It becomes a regulated abatement project under NESHAP 40 CFR 61 Subpart M, OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1101, and 15A NCAC 19C — with a 10-working-day notification window, licensed supervision, negative-pressure containment, manifested disposal, and third-party clearance air sampling all required before the property is legally re-occupied.
Abatement and removal describe the same work from two angles. Removal is the physical job; abatement is the legal framework that surrounds it. This page is about the framework — because that is what protects the homeowner, the workers, and the property's resale value when the project is finished.