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.