Office: 770-884-7761 office@amratl.com

Asbestos Abatement

⚠ Asbestos Abatement

Asbestos abatement with controlled site discipline.

Controlled containment, removal coordination, disposal documentation, and compliant abatement support for regulated asbestos-containing materials.

What this service solves

AMR supports property owners, contractors, facility managers, and public-sector teams with asbestos abatement scopes that require containment, coordination, and documentation.

The problem

Asbestos concerns can stop renovations, demolitions, insurance restoration work, and occupancy plans. The risk is not just the material itself; the risk is uncontrolled disturbance, poor communication, and unclear closeout documentation.

Why it matters

Older buildings, renovation work, ceiling and flooring systems, pipe insulation, and demolition scopes may involve regulated asbestos-containing materials. AMR should position this service around assessment intake, safe containment, removal support, disposal coordination, and project closeout.

AMR process

  • Review project details and available reports
  • Define the work area and access constraints
  • Establish containment and field controls
  • Coordinate removal and cleanup
  • Support restoration or demolition closeout
Service FAQs

Asbestos Abatement Questions

Do I need testing before abatement?

If you already have a report, submit it with the request. If not, AMR can review the situation and advise the next practical step.

Can AMR work with contractors?

Yes. AMR should be positioned for direct owner work, prime-contractor support, and subcontractor scopes.

Should I disturb suspected asbestos material?

No. Avoid cutting, sanding, tearing, or removing suspected material before the site is reviewed.

Next Step

Asbestos Abatement project?

Send AMR the property type, location, urgency, photos, available reports, and insurance or contractor details.

What to include

  • Service needed
  • Project location
  • Property type
  • Photos or reports
  • Urgency and access constraints

Who this is for

  • Homeowners
  • Commercial property teams
  • General contractors
  • Facility managers
  • Government or institutional projects