Remtech Environmental

Popcorn, tile, and texture — all handled the same way.

Service AreaGreensboro & the Triad
LicensingNC DHHS AHMP-accredited
VerificationThird-party clearance sampling

Three different ceiling materials, one regulated workflow.

Greensboro’s housing and commercial inventory cuts across decades — from the pre-war bungalows of Fisher Park to the postwar ranches off Battleground, the 1960s developments around Friendly Center, and the older industrial and medical buildings west of downtown. Acoustic popcorn texture, 12-inch drop-ceiling tile, and spray-applied ceiling coatings all show up regularly, and almost all of it pre-dates the 1981 EPA ban on spray-on asbestos ceiling product.

Once a bulk sample comes back positive, replacing or remodeling that ceiling stops being a finishes question and becomes a regulated abatement project — governed by NESHAP, OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1101, and 15A NCAC 19C. Whole-ceiling-plane work means whole-room containment, full-face PAPRs, HEPA-filtered negative pressure, and a manifested disposal trail.

Remtech runs ceiling abatements across Greensboro, High Point, and the wider Triad. Every project leaves the site with a signed disposal manifest, daily air-monitoring logs, worker exposure records, and a written third-party clearance report — the same documentation a lender, insurer, or buyer’s inspector will ask for six months later.

Why ceilings are different

Three failures that turn one room into a whole house.

Ceiling work touches the entire room volume at once. The mistakes below are the ones we see most often when an unlicensed crew gets there first.

01

DIY popcorn scraping spreads fibers across the entire home.

Friable acoustic texture releases millions of fibers per square foot the moment a putty knife touches it dry. Without containment and HEPA-filtered negative air, those fibers travel through the HVAC system and settle into carpet, attic insulation, and upholstery on every floor — a one-room remodel that becomes a whole-house decontamination problem.

02

Wet ceiling tile still releases fibers when removed.

Greensboro’s mid-century commercial buildings — schools, medical offices, retail bays around West Market and Friendly — frequently have original 12×12 or 24×24 drop-ceiling tiles installed before the 1981 spray-on ban. Even soaked, flexing one out at the grid can snap the cementitious matrix and release fibers into the room volume above the suspended ceiling.

03

Replacing a ceiling without testing voids the insurance ceiling claim.

Storm damage, plumbing leaks, and HVAC condensation are the three scenarios where Greensboro property owners most often discover asbestos mid-claim. If a contractor demos suspect texture before a bulk sample is pulled, the carrier can deny coverage, the disposal trail is broken, and the property loses the documentation a future buyer’s inspector or lender will require at closing.

The ceiling-removal workflow

From the bulk sample to the clearance report.

Every Greensboro ceiling project moves through these five phases. We don’t skip the documentation, we don’t cut the containment, and we don’t leave site without third-party clearance.

  1. 01

    Bulk sample & PLM lab confirmation

    An NC-accredited inspector pulls a representative bulk sample from the texture, tile, or spray coating and sends it to an NVLAP-accredited lab for polarized light microscopy. PLM identifies chrysotile, amosite, or crocidolite fibers above the one-percent threshold that triggers regulated abatement. Scope is built from the lab report, not from a guess.

  2. 02

    Scope: removal vs. encapsulation

    Friable popcorn texture in a room slated for renovation almost always means full removal. Stable, intact drop-ceiling tile in an undisturbed office bay can sometimes be encapsulated and managed in place under an O&M plan. We write the recommendation in plain language so the property owner, lender, and inspector are working from the same document.

  3. 03

    Whole-room containment build

    Ceiling work means the entire ceiling plane is in play, so containment is full-room. Two layers of 6-mil polyethylene seal walls, floors, fixtures, and HVAC penetrations. A three-stage decontamination unit is built at the only authorized entry. HEPA-filtered negative-air machines hold at least -0.02 inches of water column relative to surrounding spaces — verified with smoke testing before the first scrape.

  4. 04

    Wet-method removal under HEPA

    Workers in full-face PAPRs and Tyvek saturate the texture with amended water until fibers cannot release, then scrape it down in manageable sections — never sanded, never power-tooled. Drop tiles are lifted, not flexed, and double-bagged in 6-mil labeled bags as they come out. Personal exposure samples run throughout the shift to verify the OSHA PEL of 0.1 f/cc holds the entire job.

  5. 05

    Manifested disposal & clearance sampling

    Bagged waste leaves the Greensboro site under a signed chain-of-custody manifest and is delivered to a permitted landfill. An independent third-party industrial hygienist then performs aggressive-sampling clearance — leaf blowers and fans deliberately try to lift any settled fibers before the air pumps run. Re-occupancy is authorized only after PCM readings come back below 0.01 f/cc and the written clearance report is in your hands.

Why Remtech

Regulated work, run the way the EPA actually expects it.

30+
Years in business
1,000+
Abatement projects
0.01
f/cc clearance threshold
NC.
DHHS AHMP-accredited

What our clients say about our asbestos ceiling removal services.

Real reviews from homeowners and contractors across North Carolina.

★★★★★
We bought a new to us 1964 home last December and to no surprise, we had asbestos popcorn ceilings. We decided to remove the ceilings altogether versus just scraping them. To complicate things even more, we had a plumbing leak in a room that had previously been encapsulated, so we had to deal with insurance to cover a portion of the asbestos removal. Rusty and the whole team at Remtech were such a help from the first moment we spoke! They were responsive, flexible, and knowledgeable. They helped us get insurance what they needed. They even worked with us to do the removal work while we had to be out of town. Asbestos removal and dealing with insurance, especially as we were brand new to the home, was incredibly stressful. Working with Remtech was the opposite – they were helpful and easy to work with that I barely had to think about the work being done. It was a nice break for my brain! They also did a great job. We came home to a CLEAN house with no ceilings! While I’m hoping we never have to go through such a big project again, I know we’d be able to handle it because we can rely on Remtech.

Kelley JonkoffNovember 29, 2022

★★★★★
Very fast, professional and responsive. Did floor asbestos abatement for our house for a very reasonable price and they were very quick to schedule to keep us within our very close timeline.

Andre DeRosbyNovember 4, 2022

★★★★★
As a General Contractor specializing in Bathroom & Kitchen remodel, we complete in excess of 250 bathroom upgrades each year. Regardless of our remodeling and construction experience and capabilities, when it comes to addressing the unforeseen hazardous and environmental conditions posed by mold, asbestos, and lead paints, we have a responsibility to our customers to partner with the best abatement specialist possible, and as proficient in abatement as we are kitchen and bath remodeling. Remtech has proven to be that reliable and trusted partner for both our customers and company. We highly recommend the Remtech Team.

Michael Kern, COO – The Bath ShopOctober 21, 2022

★★★★★
A few months ago I used Remtech Envir. to remove asbestos from the ceiling of my home, and to this day I’m still amazed with their service that I’ve been meaning to write a review, and today’s the day! The whole process went through so smoothly because of their professionalism, punctuality and care. At the end of each day I received an update from Rusty who was the project manager which was super helpful, and because of their expertise I knew the job was getting done correctly. There was a lot of asbestos to remove, and they showed up and delivered hard work to get it done within the time frame that was initially discussed. So grateful we used their services! I would highly recommend!

Margaret PereidaOctober 17, 2022

★★★★★
Our church basement flooded and the old asbestos tiles curled up and had to be removed. Jeff Brewer came over to look at our problem, explained what they would do. He furnished a quote very quickly with a fair price. After checking with two other companies, Jeff’s instructive conversation, ease of manner, willingness to help and a fair price won him the work. As a former contractor, I know how backed up companies can be in their schedule. He told us of a target time about 4-6 weeks off, which was fine. He called a couple of weeks later and had an opening in his schedule and wanted to come earlier. That was great. Their staff arrived on time and delivered a very quick, professional and clean project. This allowed us to get our Fellowship Hall floored and back in operating condition prior to the start of the school year. It is a pleasure to work with a company that communicates well and delivers their service in a superior way.

Larry SheltonSeptember 16, 2022

★★★★★
I have spoken with Bryan on many occasions about growth strategy. He has always been open to communicate. I look forward to future conversations.

Harley GroffSeptember 6, 2022

★★★★★
Remtech came in and did a removal of asbestos when our home developed a leak and the sheetrock ceiling had to be removed. Got right to work, kept us informed every step of the way and did a great job of cleaning up. Would use them again in a heart beat!!

Tim KaiserAugust 15, 2022

★★★★★
The cost was higher than expected, so I did not move forward at that time. I will use Remtech when I am ready to have the work done. They are very professional and take the time to answer any questions. The rep arrived on time, explained the process and provided the estimate. A very positive experience.

GregJuly 18, 2022

Frequently asked

The questions worth asking up front.

Most of these come up on the first phone call. Short answers below — the long answers, tailored to your property and timeline, are a conversation.

Does my popcorn ceiling automatically contain asbestos?

No — but visual inspection alone cannot rule it out. Acoustic texture installed before the 1981 EPA spray-on ban frequently contains chrysotile, but post-1981 product can also contain it where contractors used existing inventory. The only defensible answer is a bulk sample analyzed by polarized light microscopy at an NVLAP-accredited lab. We pull the sample, the lab reads it, and the report comes back with percentage and fiber type identified.

Can intact drop-ceiling tiles stay in place if they tested positive?

Sometimes. If the tile is non-friable, undisturbed, and the space is not slated for renovation, NC DHHS allows it to be managed in place under an operations and maintenance plan. The moment a renovation, sprinkler retrofit, lighting upgrade, or sale-to-buyer-with-inspector enters the picture, removal is almost always the cleaner answer. We write the recommendation in plain English so you can make the call.

How long does a Greensboro ceiling abatement typically take?

A single-room popcorn-ceiling abatement is usually two days of active work plus one day for clearance turnaround. A full-floor or whole-building drop-tile removal in a Greensboro office or medical bay runs three to seven days depending on square footage, after-hours scheduling, and HVAC complexity. Every quote includes the full timeline through written clearance, not just gross removal.

Do occupants have to leave during the work?

Yes for residential — once full-room containment is built and negative pressure is established, the work area and the immediate buffer outside it are off-limits. For commercial drop-ceiling jobs we frequently work after hours or in phased zones so the rest of the building stays operational. Either way, re-occupancy of the abated zone only happens after the third-party clearance report passes.

What does the clearance air sample actually prove?

Final clearance demonstrates the post-abatement environment has airborne fiber concentrations below 0.01 f/cc by phase contrast microscopy — the reoccupancy threshold defined by AHERA and adopted by NC DHHS. Aggressive sampling deliberately lifts settled fibers before sampling, so a passing result means the cleanup held up under stress, not just under still air. That report is the document a buyer’s inspector or insurance carrier will ask for later.

Where we work

Asbestos ceiling removal across Greensboro & the Triad.

Greensboro, NCHigh Point, NCWinston-Salem, NCKernersville, NCBurlington, NCMebane, NCJamestown, NCOak Ridge, NCSummerfield, NCStokesdale, NCReidsville, NCAsheboro, NCDurham, NCChapel Hill, NCRaleigh, NCAsheville, NC
Get started

One scope. Documented work. Verified clearance.

Send us the lab report or the inspection findings — or call before any of that, if you’re still trying to figure out whether your popcorn ceiling, drop-ceiling tile, or spray texture is regulated. We quote in writing and we don’t pressure.

Reach us

Send a few details — we’ll respond same-day.

Tell us what the lab found, when the renovation or sale is happening, and where the property is in the Triad. We’ll come look, scope it honestly, and quote it in writing.

Get a Free Quote Today(919) 554-2800