A Look At What Hartington Asbestos Surveys Examine

If you're arranging an asbestos survey for your home or rental property, you might be wondering what exactly the surveyor will be looking for. Understanding the purpose and scope of the survey can help you feel more prepared-and ensure you know what steps to take once the results come in.

This guide outlines what Hartington asbestos surveyors investigate across Derbyshire, the methods used, and the follow-up process.

Asbestos Surveys

What Is the Aim of an Asbestos Survey?

Asbestos surveys aim to find, identify, and assess the condition of ACMs in domestic buildings. Such materials were common in UK buildings until the 1999 asbestos ban. ACMs may remain in homes constructed prior to the year 2000.

A qualified surveyor will typically:

Pinpoint the location and amount of asbestos-containing materials.

Check the current state of each material.

Consider how likely the materials are to be disturbed.

The findings help homeowners, landlords, and contractors make informed decisions about safe management or removal.

What Areas and Materials Are Inspected

Here are the main elements a qualified surveyor will investigate:

Common Asbestos-Containing Materials
The surveyor inspects areas where asbestos was typically used, including:

Textured coatings (e.g. Artex ceilings and walls)

Asbestos insulating boards in walls and ceilings

Pipe insulation and lagging

Vinyl floor tiles and the adhesive underneath

Cement products (like guttering, soffits, or flue pipes)

Asbestos cement roof panels or garage coverings

Internal partitions or heat shields containing ACMs

Material Integrity Assessment

The condition of any suspected ACMs is recorded. Fragile or deteriorated materials, particularly friable types, carry increased danger. Damaged lagging presents greater concern than sealed cement boards.

Potential for Disruption

Surveyors determine how easily each material could be disturbed. Panels in high-traffic areas are at greater risk than those hidden in attics.

Are Samples Taken?

In most cases, yes. If materials are suspected of containing asbestos, the surveyor will usually take small samples for laboratory testing. Testing reveals:

Whether asbestos is in the material.

The type of asbestos (e.g. chrysotile, amosite, crocidolite).

How much asbestos is present.

Sampling is carried out with care to avoid contamination.

Different Survey Types Explained

Surveys vary based on the reason they are being conducted:

Survey for Day-to-Day Use

Focuses on ACMs that pose risks during everyday operations.

Carried out with limited invasion to the property.

Best for those who need regular safety checks or general awareness.

Survey Prior to Renovation or Demolition

Legally required ahead of major structural work.

In-depth inspection that includes destructive sampling.

Targets concealed materials that would be affected by renovation.

Post-Survey Procedures and Reports

Once completed, you'll receive a detailed asbestos survey report. Your report will show:

A list of all ACMs found.

Images and positions of each ACM.

Evaluations of condition and associated risk.

Advice on what to do next, from removal to monitoring.

Dangerous ACMs will need to be dealt with by a licensed team. Encapsulation or periodic reviews may be enough for stable ACMs.

Conclusion

These surveys give you a roadmap for safe management, not just detection. From home upgrades to rental responsibilities, surveys play a key role in safeguarding health.

Need help arranging a survey or making sense of your report? A licensed expert can assist. Let us help you carry out asbestos management the right way.

We've got more information on asbestos and ACMs for Hartington residents on the site here:

We also cover more of the local Derbyshire area too:

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