What "abatement" actually means.

Under EPA's framework, abatement is the permanent elimination of a lead-based paint hazard — not the temporary control of one. To qualify, the method must be expected to last at least 20 years. Three methods qualify: encapsulation, enclosure, replacement, and removal of the lead-containing component or coating itself.

1. Component replacement.

Best for: friction and impact surfaces — window sashes and jambs, doors, baseboards. Anywhere the paint is regularly disturbed.

Replacement is the cleanest of the three: the lead goes out as solid waste, not as dust. The downside is cost and disruption — and, in landmarked or character buildings, the loss of original woodwork.

2. Encapsulation.

Best for: intact lead-painted surfaces in low-friction locations — walls, ceilings, occasional trim. Surfaces that won't be subject to wear.

An EPA-approved encapsulant is applied over the lead paint, bonding to it and locking it in place. The system is rated for 20 years if applied correctly to a sound substrate. The catch is the substrate test — encapsulants fail on already-deteriorated paint or unsound walls.

3. Removal.

Best for: situations where the substrate must be preserved and the paint is in poor condition — or where the building's lead-paint history makes encapsulation a poor bet.

Wet-scraping with HEPA-shrouded tools, chemical strippers and HEPA vacuuming are the approved methods. Dry sanding, open-flame burning and high-temperature heat guns are prohibited. Removal generates the most lead-bearing waste and requires the most rigorous containment — but produces the cleanest end state.

How we recommend choosing.

Three filters, in order:

  1. Friction class. Friction surfaces almost always go to replacement. The paint will not stay encapsulated on a window sash that's opened and closed weekly.
  2. Substrate condition. If the underlying plaster, wood or drywall is failing, the surface should be replaced regardless of paint method. Encapsulating bad substrate is a five-year bet, not a twenty-year one.
  3. Building character. Landmark, historic and character-preservation buildings often push toward removal over replacement to retain original material.

Clearance is the same in every case.

Regardless of method, independent post-abatement dust-wipe clearance is required, sampled against current EPA thresholds. A failed clearance triggers re-cleaning and re-testing — at no charge to the client on Envirex jobs.

Lead Abatement Specification
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