Greensboro's project mix is unusually broad — single-family renovation in the Fisher Park and Sunset Hills neighborhoods, mill and warehouse conversion downtown, commercial tenant fit-out along Battleground Avenue, and ongoing maintenance work across Guilford County's older school and institutional inventory. Each carries its own asbestos profile, and each crosses NESHAP thresholds the moment regulated material is disturbed.
When 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 AHERA clearance air sampling all required before the property is legally re-occupied.
Abatement and removal are two angles on the same job. Removal describes the physical work; abatement is the legal framework that surrounds it. This page is about the framework — because on a commercial property in particular, the framework is what protects the building's permanent environmental record.