Asbestos in Soil: What Project Teams Need to Know Before Excavation Begins

You cannot identify asbestos by sight alone. Learn why early hazardous materials assessment helps projects reduce risk, delays and unexpected costs.

When project teams think about asbestos, they often think about buildings: wall sheeting, roofing, pipes, eaves or insulation.

But asbestos risk does not always stop at the structure.

On redevelopment, demolition, civil and infrastructure sites, asbestos-containing material can also be present in or on soil. It may be found as visible fragments across a site, mixed through fill, buried beneath former structures or uncovered during excavation works.

When it is identified unexpectedly, asbestos in soil can have a significant impact on a project’s programme, budget and site management requirements.

How does asbestos end up in soil?

Asbestos-containing materials may become present in soil for a number of reasons.

Older structures may have been demolished without the complete removal of building materials. Fragments may have been buried, spread across the site or mixed into fill during historical earthworks. Former industrial or infrastructure sites may also contain buried waste or legacy materials from earlier site activities.

In some areas, asbestos may also occur naturally in soil and rock formations, creating risk during excavation, roadworks or other ground-disturbing activities.

Regardless of how it came to be there, the key issue for project teams is understanding the nature and extent of the material before it is unnecessarily disturbed or moved through the site.

Why unexpected finds create project risk

Finding suspected asbestos during excavation can require works in the affected area to pause while the material is assessed and appropriate controls are put in place.

Without prior planning, this can affect:

  • Excavation and earthworks sequencing
  • Stockpile management
  • Waste classification and disposal
  • Plant and personnel movement
  • Contractor productivity
  • Programme timeframes
  • Project costs and variation exposure

The issue can become more complex if impacted soil has already been excavated, relocated or combined with other material before the asbestos is identified.

That is why early investigation and clear management planning are so important, particularly on sites with former buildings, previous demolition works, historic filling or known contamination risk.

What does assessment involve?

Assessment of asbestos in soil should be appropriate to the site, the proposed works and the nature of the suspected material.

Depending on the project, this may involve:

  • Reviewing historical site information and previous reports
  • Inspecting surface material and accessible areas
  • Identifying visible fragments of potential asbestos-containing material
  • Developing a suitable sampling strategy
  • Undertaking soil and material assessment
  • Determining whether further management or remediation is required
  • Providing clear advice for excavation, stockpiling, disposal or validation

The objective is to provide the project team with reliable information about the risk and how it affects the proposed works.

A well-planned assessment may also help avoid treating large areas of soil as impacted where targeted investigation can better define the actual issue.

Managing asbestos in soil during works

Where asbestos in soil is identified, the management approach will depend on site conditions, proposed land use, project scope and relevant regulatory requirements.

Options may include removal of impacted material, controlled excavation, containment, validation or other management measures designed to ensure the site can be used safely and works can progress appropriately.

For contractors and project managers, the practical questions are often immediate:

  • Can works continue in other areas?
  • What material needs to be isolated?
  • How should stockpiles be managed?
  • What controls are required?
  • Where can material be transported?
  • What evidence is required before the area can be cleared or handed over?

This is where timely, straightforward advice makes a real difference.

Reduce uncertainty before excavation starts

Asbestos in soil is much easier to account for in a project plan than to manage as an unexpected discovery in the middle of earthworks.

Early assessment can help clients understand potential risk, build appropriate controls into the works and reduce the likelihood of avoidable delays once excavation begins.

At BBN Consulting, we provide asbestos-in-soil assessment and practical environmental advice to support projects from early planning through to works on site, remediation and validation.

Our role is simple: help project teams understand what they are dealing with and provide a clear pathway forward.

Preparing for demolition, excavation or redevelopment works? Speak with BBN Consulting about asbestos-in-soil assessment and practical advice before ground disturbance begins.

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