Vinyl Asbestos Floor Tile (VAT)
Resilient vinyl floor tiles manufactured with chrysotile asbestos fibres for durability and fire resistance.
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Descripción
Vinyl Asbestos Tile (VAT) is one of the most common asbestos-containing materials found in buildings constructed or renovated between the 1950s and mid-1980s. These resilient floor tiles were manufactured by binding chrysotile (white) asbestos fibres into a polyvinyl chloride (PVC) matrix, typically containing between 5% and 25% asbestos by weight. The asbestos provided dimensional stability, fire resistance, and durability, making VAT an economical and long-lasting flooring choice for decades.
VAT was installed on an enormous scale across residential, commercial, institutional, and government buildings. Schools, hospitals, office blocks, military facilities, and social housing estates used vinyl asbestos tiles extensively. The tiles were manufactured in a wide variety of colours and patterns, often imitating marble, terrazzo, or other decorative finishes. Major brands such as Armstrong Excelon, Kentile, and Azrock dominated the market in the United States, while Nairn and Amtico were widely used across the United Kingdom and Europe.
The classic identifier for vinyl asbestos tile is its dimension: 9 inches by 9 inches (229 mm x 229 mm). This size is almost synonymous with asbestos-containing floor tiles. Later 12-inch (305 mm) tiles may also contain asbestos, particularly those manufactured before 1986. Tiles are typically 1/16 inch (1.5 mm) to 1/8 inch (3 mm) thick, relatively stiff, and tend to crack rather than flex when bent.
Although VAT is classified as non-friable when intact, it can release dangerous asbestos fibres when broken, cut, sanded, or removed without proper precautions. Drilling, grinding, or aggressive scraping during renovation work creates fibre-laden dust. Additionally, the adhesive or mastic used to bond the tile to the subfloor frequently contains asbestos as well, creating a double hazard during demolition. VAT that is in good condition and left undisturbed poses minimal risk, but any planned disturbance requires professional assessment, air monitoring, and often licensed asbestos removal.
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Cómo identificarlo
The most reliable visual clue is tile size: the classic 9-inch by 9-inch (229 mm x 229 mm) format is strongly associated with asbestos content. Tiles are generally thin (1.5 mm to 3 mm), rigid, and brittle rather than flexible. Colours range across solid tones and streaked patterns, often in earth tones, greens, and greys. The underside of the tile may show a darker backer or impression of the adhesive. Definitive identification requires laboratory analysis using polarised light microscopy (PLM) or transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
Riesgo sanitario y friabilidad
Este material tiene un nivel de riesgo de 2 sobre 5.
Se clasifica como non-friable, lo que significa que las fibras de amianto están firmemente unidas dentro de la matriz del material. En buen estado y sin perturbaciones, el riesgo de liberación de fibras es bajo. Sin embargo, cortar, taladrar, lijar o romper el material puede liberar fibras peligrosas.
Qué hacer si encuentras este material
If you suspect you have vinyl asbestos floor tiles, do not attempt to remove, sand, or break them yourself. Leave intact tiles in place if they are in good condition and not crumbling. Engage a qualified asbestos surveyor to take a sample for laboratory testing. If removal is necessary, hire a licensed asbestos removal contractor who will use wet methods, HEPA-filtered equipment, and proper waste disposal procedures. Encapsulation or over-layment with new flooring is often a safer and more cost-effective alternative to full removal.
Preguntas frecuentes
Are all 9x9 inch floor tiles asbestos?
Can I install new flooring over asbestos vinyl tiles?
How much does it cost to remove asbestos floor tiles?
Is it safe to walk on asbestos vinyl floor tiles?
Materiales relacionados
Otros materiales con amianto que podrías encontrar.
Asbestos Tile Adhesive / Cutback
Black mastic adhesive used to install floor tiles, frequently containing asbestos and often overlooked.
Thermoplastic Asbestos Tile
Early asphalt-based floor tiles containing asbestos fibres, commonly found in pre-1970 buildings.
Asbestos Floor Backing Paper
Friable felt or paper underlay containing asbestos, found beneath sheet vinyl and linoleum flooring.
Vinyl Sheet Flooring with Asbestos Backing
Sheet vinyl flooring with asbestos-containing felt or paper backing, common in kitchens and bathrooms.
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