Acoustic, popcorn, and spray-on textured ceilings were applied across millions of American homes from the 1950s through about 1981. The binder usually contains chrysotile, and the texture itself is friable — meaning it crumbles under hand pressure and releases fibers directly into the air the moment it's disturbed.
The single most common illegal homeowner DIY in North Carolina is scraping a popcorn ceiling without testing it first. The fibers don't stay in the room. They settle into the carpet, the HVAC return, the duct interiors, and every soft surface in the house. Cleaning that up after the fact costs more than the abatement would have.
We test first, contain the entire room, scrape wet under negative pressure with HEPA filtration, double-bag the waste to a licensed landfill, and clear the air before anyone re-enters.
Asheville's housing stock skews older and the mountain climate keeps interior moisture variable year-round. Pre-1981 materials are common and renovations almost always disturb something the original builder took for granted.