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Asbestos Removal Central Coast

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What is Asbestos?

Asbestos is a mineral which has been widely mined and processed throughout the world. It is a natural fibre that comes in three basic forms: white (chrysotile), blue (crocidolite) and brown (amosite). Asbestos was exploited commercially for their desirable physical properties. They all have in common their asbestiform habit, long, (1:20) thin fibrous crystals. The most commonly found building materials that contain asbestos are asbestos cement products. The use of all forms of asbestos has been banned nationally since 31 December 2003.

If your Building was built or renovated Pre 1990 then its likely to contain asbestos in some form.

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Removal of Asbestos

When you want to remove asbestos, call Kimick Roofing Solutions. They know how to remove it safely, correctly, and dispose of it properly. If the asbestos isn’t removed properly, it can be dangerous for those who come in contact with it and can cause Asbestosis.

Asbestosis is a lung disease where the lung begins to scar. The scars make it difficult for the lungs to function normally. It’s caused by breathing in fibers from asbestos. This can take years or decades for this to happen.  Asbestos is no longer used in buildings or building materials because of this.

asbestos roof

Specialising In:

  • Preparation Of Site And Work Documents
  • Air Monitoring For The Period Of Removal
  • Register Asbestos Removal
  • Provide Clearance Certificate
  • Minimise Risk And Down Time By Working Quickly And Efficient
  • Vacuuming All Roof And Cavities As Specified
  • Disposal Of All Asbestos Containing Materials
  • All Safety Protocol And Standards Are Always Upheld During The Process

Dangers of Asbestos in your Roof

Asbestos is an extremely hazardous material that poses risk to health by inhalation when the fibres become airborne and are subsequently inhaled. Asbestos is made up of very fine fibres, but the most dangerous are those naked to the eye, yet penetrate the deepest areas of the lungs.

Exposure to asbestos fibres is known to cause Mesothelioma – a deadly disease caused by inhaling the particles of dust as the asbestos degrades; eating away at the lining of the lungs and developing into a deadly cancer. It is known to cause diseases such as asbestosis, lung cancer, pleural plaques, and pleural thickening.

For More information on Mesothelioma contact the Asbestos Foundation at : http://adfa.org.au/

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roof with asbestos

What Does Asbestos Look Like?

Asbestos can be difficult to identify visually. Sometimes the only way to be sure is to get the material tested. If you are uncertain then treat the item as contaminated.

There are two classes of asbestos types:

Legal Responsibilities for Owner/Controller of Premises
Who is classified as the controller of the premises?
As per the Code of Practice for the Management and Control of Asbestos in Workplaces [NOHSC:2002(2005)], the “person with control” may be:
  • The owner of the premises
  • A person who has under any contract or lease an obligation to maintain or repair the premises
  • A person who is occupying the premises
  • A person who is able to make decisions about work undertaken at the premises
  • An employer at the premises
Persons with control of premises have a duty of care to:
  • Develop, implement and maintain an asbestos management plan.
  • Investigate the premises for the presence or possible presence of asbestos-containing material
  • Develop and maintain a register of the identified or presumed asbestos-containing material, including details on their locations, accessibility, condition, risk assessments, and control measures.
  • Develop measures to remove the asbestos-containing materials or otherwise to minimize the risks and prevent exposure to asbestos
  • Ensure the control measures are implemented as soon as possible and are maintained as long as the asbestos-containing materials remain in the workplace.

Commonly Used Asbestos Materials

The following list are common areas where asbestos is likely to found in buildings. This is by no means a definitive list of products as there are over 3,000 products that asbestos was used in.

The only way to determine if asbestos is present is to have an asbestos consultant to inspect and collect a sample for asbestos testing.
Airconditioning Units
Asbestos can be located within the duct work of Air Conditioning re-heating units. This is more specifically located around heating elements.
Carpet Underlay
Asbestos was carried in hessian bags from Wittenoon in Western Australia which was then subsequently used in some carpet underlay. Also asbestos was used in the adhesive to glue down the carpet underlay which is usually a black bitumous material.
Ceilings
Asbestos ceilings can be found in many forms which include asbestos fibre cement sheet (fibro), vermiculite spray applied ceilings. The vermiculate look like popcorn and many of you might remember your old high school science lab with this material. Asbestos ceiling tiles are also commonly used.
Cloths
Cloth linings can be found around material that may require thermal insulation such as a fire cabinet and around flues. Fire blankets can also be made of asbestos.
Closets
Closets may be lined with asbestos to increase the fire resistance. This may be in the form of mainly fibre cement sheeting (fibro), softer insulation board and sometimes millboard to ceiling linings.
Cowls
Asbestos cowls to flue pipes may contain asbestos cement.
Ductwork
Metal ductwork as well as containing millboard to the reheating elements may contain asbestos to the gasket material lining the flange joints to provide an airtight seal. The asbestos was introduced to hinder the spread of flame within ductwork.
Eaves
The majority of eaves to all buildings built before 1990 will have asbestos. This is one of the most commonly tested material for asbestos. Typical asbestos eaves which are made of asbestos fibre cement sheeting otherwise known as fibro.
Fibre Cement Sheeting
Fibre cement sheet is the most prominent and common form of asbestos that people recognise as being potentially hazardous. True fibre cement sheet is a very hard material. Caution should be applied in determining whether the sheet material is cement or insulating board. insulating board is a softer material and releases fibres much more readily than the stronger cement counterpart. A good indication of true asbestos cement is a golf ball or dimpled pattern on the back of the sheet. Asbestos insulating board will generally have a smoother finish to the back.
Electrical Backing Boards
These are also commonly found asbestos containing materials which are of a resin or bitumous type material. One distinct sign (by no means definitive) is a strong smell of bitumen or tar, the smell of newly made road. While these are fairly stable composite materials, there is usually asbestos dust within the fuse box due to electricians drilling holes into the board.
Fire Damage
Asbestos fire damage is caused as a result of exposure to temperatures of about 1000 ºC where the effects of charring, spalling, loss of structural strength, etc to the asbestos materials is observed. The major issue with asbestos fires is the debris left behind which can be very fine pieces and/or bundles of asbestos fibres which can be spread to a large area as a result of spalling. Asbestos contamination can be found within ash and dust after and during an asbestos fire.
Fire Doors
Fire doors can comprise of friable asbestos core material within the door which can be released into the air when fixing door handles, locks and hinges. When observed from the top of most fire doors the core is visible, being a white millboard material. Other fire doors can have fibre cement sheet lining the inside of the fire door.
Flooring
There are many different types of flooring material that contain asbestos. The most common are fibre cement sheet and vinyl sheet or tiles. In many cases the floor may be hidden by carpet and tiles. A pre-demolition survey is required to identify these materials within the house.
Flues
Flue pipes which exhaust hot air from boilers and heater may contain gaskets and pipes containing both stable bonded asbestos such as cement pipes or friable rope gaskets to flange joints and plates.
Gables
The pitched side of the roof otherwise known as gables can contain corrugated moulded asbestos products and flat asbestos cement sheet.
Garages
External garages can contain asbestos cement walls, eaves and corrugated asbestos roofs. Newer garages that are part of the house can have asbestos sheet or fibro to assist in hindering the spread of fire, if a fire were to start in the garage.
Gaskets
Asbestos gaskets are used in applications such as hot water pipes, exhausts and boilers. Gasket material is generally friable.
Insulating Board
Insulating board is considered to be friable as the material can liberate asbestos fibres into the air much more easy than asbestos cement. In many cases most asbestos consultants will assess insulating board as a cement product, however asbestos insulating board is a much lower density than cement. Ensure that your asbestos inspector is NATA accredited or a certified occupational hygienist.
Insulation
Asbestos insulation was used in ceiling and roof cavities, with hundreds of homes in the ACT and Canberra . Limpet spray applied thermal insulation was used to fire proof structural beams to buildings. This material is friable and an extremely high risk of exposure if disturbed.
Laundries
Laundries are one of the wet areas that commonly have asbestos cement sheet and asbestos insulating board lining to walls and ceilings. Vinyl tiles and cement sheets to the floors were also used. Due to water and electricity in close proximity, asbestos lined finishes will assist to reduce the spread of flame.
Lift Brakes
The brakes to lifts will generally contain asbestos to assist in reducing heat and thereby brake fade. Most brakes produced up until about 2004 contained asbestos.
Mastic
Asbestos mastic sealant is used for a wide variety of purposes from joining flange joints to ductwork to pointing material to stone and bricks, and movement joints. The likelihood of the mastic containing asbestos is increased with areas that may be subjected to fire or that may assist the structural integrity during a fire.
Movement Joints
Movement joints to buildings can contain asbestos. These may be vertical movement joints or between concrete floor slabs. The asbestos being in a composite form is generally stable unless they have become brittle through heat. The movement joints may be generally an asbestos flexible sealant type material or a bitumous asbestos material.
Packing Material
Asbestos fibre cement sheet and asbestos insulating board was used to pack and jack things to the right height or place. Packing supports were widely used under pylons to house supports and used in random places such as around the pipes and in brickwork. Asbestos packing material has been found on door frames. There seems to be no limit to where asbestos sheet was used.
Pentrating Packing Pillows
These materials have loose friable asbestos within fabric used to pack penetration through walls, ceilings, pipes and around cables. This is to maintain the fire resistance of walls where services are required.
Pipes
Asbestos pipes may include downpipes, asbestos cement water pipes underground, asbestos cement flues for transporting hot air from boilers. They are generally made of asbestos cement, providing a hard wearing product.
Roof
Asbestos roofs are generally made of a corrugated moulded product that is generally fairly stable material. Being a brittle roof there are other significant issues which include the potential of falling through by walking on them.
Roof Membranes
Roof membranes are generally a bituminous material. They can reside at the top of the roof or underneath roof tiles in a sheet material. They are usually a black colour and the asbestos fibres can generally be seen with the naked eye.
Sink Sound Dampener
Many people are unaware that asbestos can reside even under the kitchen sink. The square pad under the sink or bitumous spray applied coating may be made of asbestos.
Soil
Asbestos soil can be found due to old buildings and materials that have contaminated the soil. The level of risk is dependent on the type of asbestos contamination. Asbestos cement is generally bonded and maintains structural integrity compared to asbestos lagging materials that may disperse individual fibres into the air at high concentrations.
Spandrel Panels
Spandrel panels are the panels that are found below the windows to buildings. Asbestos spandrel panels can be of fibre cement sheet, 20 mm asbestos cement sheet or asbestos insulating board that is sandwiched between metal panels.
Telephone Pits
Most of the old telephone pits contain asbestos as a bonded moulded product and can be seen in most streets in Australia.
Toilet Cisterns and Cubical Partitions
Toilet cisterns can comprise of asbestos moulded products either above the toilet or behind walls in cavities whilst toilet cubicle partitions can commonly comprise of 20mm thick compressed asbestos cement sheet.
Valves
Friable asbestos can be found within the insulation of valves to hot water pipes and gaskets to flanges of valves and pipes.
Ventilation Ducts
Asbestos cement ventilation ducts are common on older buildings with basements, laundries and cellars below ground to increase the ventilation. These unsuspecting items may contain asbestos.
Vinyl Floor Tiles
Asbestos vinyl tiles commonly contain asbestos. The asbestos tiles are nominally 9 inches square. Vinyl sheet can also contain asbestos as well as the bitumous adhesive used to glue the asbestos vinyl sheet and asbestos vinyl tiles down.
Walls
Asbestos cement sheet and asbestos insulating board are used throughout buildings to increase the fire rating to hinder the spread of fire.
Window Putty
Window putty can contain asbestos of different types which may include a stable composite putty within old timber window frames or rope type friable window gaskets to Georgian wire frame windows. The uses of asbestos within the putty assists the fire resistance, increasing the structural integrity of the window during a fire.

Kimick Roofing Solutions

Core Values

We believe that in building a good business you must have a core set of values that align with your own. The staff you employ must align with these core values for you to create a great working culture and environment. A place you’ll love to come to, to be part of the family and not just somewhere to work at or hold a job.

Good Work Ethic
Honesty
Family
Communication
Belonging

On Time

We like to do what we say, when we say we will.

In Budget

We know that money is important and remaining within clients’ budget is a necessity.

Hassle Free

We like to take the hassle out of the project by making sure that all procedures are scheduled, organised and the client is aware of the timeline.

People Say The Nicest Things

See what our clients are saying about our range of services.
“Working with Kimick and their staff on our school projects has been so easy. Their ‘can do attitude’ assures the project progress easy & without any hassle. Thoroughly recommend them to anyone doing big commercial and industrial roofing works.”
Frank
Supervisor - Lurnea Public School
“Kimick workmanship is of the highest quality ensuring they always conduct themselves with a high level of professionalism. Kimick are extremely knowledgable in regards to high safety of their workers and are committed to ensure the workplace is a safe and productive environment at all times. I thoroughly recommend Kimick for all roofing works.”
Trent
Ainsworth Building Construction
To Mick, Kim and the entire team thank you so much for the professionalism shown when recently replacing my tile roof with colorbond. The entire team have been friendly and professional with the work being completed on time despite the team working on a 40degree Celsius day. It was a pleasure dealing with Kimick Holdings and I would not hesitate to recommend their services.
Jane W
Residential Roof Replacement

Contact Kimick Roofing today for expert roofing solutions!