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Many
buildings contain asbestos, which was used in spray-applied
flame retardant, thermal system insulation, and in a variety of
other materials. Typically, asbestos was "flocked" above
false ceilings, inside technical ducts, and in many other small
spaces where firefighters would have difficulty gaining access.
Structural components like asbestos panels were also used. In residences,
it was often a component of a type of flocked acoustic ceiling called
"popcorn ceiling", until its production was banned in
the U.S. in 1978. However, the ban allowed installers to use up
remaining stocks, so houses built as late as 1986 could still have
asbestos in their acoustic ceilings. The only way to be sure is
to remove a sample and have it tested by a competent laboratory.

Depending on how and where asbestos was applied,
it might not pose any risk to most users of the building. If the
fibers cannot dislodge themselves, they cannot be inhaled, and thus
the risk is absent.
However, with certain ways of applying asbestos, particularly flocking,
asbestos fibers may gradually drop off into the air. Furthermore,
in all cases, asbestos poses special hazards to maintenance personnel
who have to drill holes in walls for installation of cables or pipes.
Also, even if the workers are protected, such maintenance operation
may release fibers into the air, which may be inhaled by other users
later. As a consequence, interventions in areas where asbestos is
present often have to follow stringent procedures.
The removal of asbestos from a building is quite
difficult because of the above constraints. If removal is to be
performed when users are still present in the building, it is usually
necessary to relocate some of them temporarily. Typically, the part
of the building from which asbestos is being removed has to be sealed
off in order to prevent contamination of the other areas.
Warning! An asbestos-containing building that is to be
torn down may have to be sealed, and to have its asbestos safely
removed first before ordinary demolition can be performed. The asbestos
removal may take longer and cost more than the actual tearing-down
of the building.
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