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Pennsylvania asbestos exposure education

Understanding Asbestos Exposure Risks in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania has a deep industrial history involving steel mills, shipyards, railroads, power generation, manufacturing plants, refineries, schools, public buildings, and commercial construction where asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for decades.

Pennsylvania asbestos education resource

This page is designed as a plain-English educational guide for understanding where asbestos exposure may have occurred in Pennsylvania and why older industrial, maritime, commercial, school, and public buildings may still be important to a person’s exposure history.

Many asbestos-related diseases are associated with exposures that occurred decades before symptoms appeared. For that reason, Pennsylvania exposure history often involves older jobs, steel mills, shipyards, railroads, power plants, manufacturing settings, construction projects, and household take-home exposure.


Where asbestos exposure may have occurred in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania’s industrial economy created many settings where asbestos-containing materials were historically used. Asbestos was valued because it resisted heat, fire, chemicals, friction, and wear. Those properties made it common in older insulation, mechanical systems, boiler rooms, turbines, furnaces, industrial gaskets, refractory materials, ship systems, rail equipment, flooring, roofing, siding, and fireproofing.

Exposure may have occurred when these materials were installed, maintained, repaired, removed, demolished, cut, scraped, sanded, or otherwise disturbed. Workers did not always know when asbestos was present, and many jobs involved nearby or bystander exposure when another trade disturbed dusty materials in the same work area.

Pennsylvania exposure history note: A meaningful asbestos exposure history may include more than one setting — employment, union trade work, shipyard work, military service, railroad work, school buildings, industrial maintenance, home renovation, and secondhand household exposure.
Pennsylvania-style steel mill with molten metal and industrial workers
Steel mills and heavy industrial facilities used heat-resistant materials, steam systems, furnaces, boilers, valves, pipe insulation, and refractory products where asbestos-containing materials were historically common.

Common Pennsylvania industries historically associated with asbestos use

Steel millsFurnaces, refractory materials, boilers, pipe insulation, gaskets, and high-heat equipment.
ShipyardsEngine rooms, boiler rooms, marine piping, pumps, valves, gaskets, and vessel insulation.
Power plantsSteam lines, turbines, boilers, condensate systems, pumps, valves, and thermal insulation.

Pennsylvania workers in steel production, shipbuilding, power generation, railroad maintenance, chemical production, refineries, manufacturing, foundries, public utilities, and construction trades may have encountered asbestos-containing materials. The level of concern depended on the time period, specific materials, job tasks, ventilation, work practices, and whether dust controls or respiratory protection were used.

Industrial workers in a Pennsylvania steel or manufacturing facility
Industrial workers, maintenance employees, supervisors, contractors, and tradespeople may have worked around older asbestos-containing equipment or nearby tasks that disturbed asbestos-containing materials.

Steel mills, foundries, and manufacturing facilities

Pennsylvania steel mills and manufacturing plants often relied on high-temperature equipment, steam systems, boilers, furnaces, ovens, refractory materials, and heavy mechanical systems. Asbestos-containing materials were historically used to insulate hot surfaces, protect equipment, reduce fire risk, and seal industrial systems.

Workers who may have encountered asbestos in these settings include steelworkers, millwrights, pipefitters, insulators, maintenance employees, electricians, welders, boiler workers, machinists, laborers, operators, supervisors, and outside contractors. Exposure could happen during routine maintenance, shutdowns, repairs, demolition, equipment replacement, or renovation of older industrial areas.

Industrial asbestos exposure was not always limited to the worker directly handling the material. Dust could spread in shared work spaces, especially when insulation, gaskets, fireproofing, refractory materials, or furnace linings were removed or repaired.

Shipyards and maritime asbestos exposure

Pennsylvania’s shipyard history, especially in the Philadelphia region, created another important asbestos exposure setting. Ships historically used asbestos-containing materials because vessels required fire-resistant and heat-resistant products in confined mechanical areas.

Shipyard workers, Navy personnel, pipefitters, machinists, welders, insulators, electricians, boiler workers, and maintenance crews may have worked around asbestos in engine rooms, boiler rooms, piping systems, pumps, valves, gaskets, packing, bulkheads, and fireproofing materials.

Philadelphia-style shipyard with workers and insulated pipe systems
Shipyards and naval repair facilities often involved confined mechanical spaces, marine pipe insulation, boilers, pumps, valves, and fire-resistant materials that are important to review in a Pennsylvania exposure history.

Power plants and steam systems in Pennsylvania

Power plants are another important Pennsylvania exposure setting because many older power generation facilities used steam systems, turbines, boilers, condensate lines, pumps, valves, and high-temperature equipment. Asbestos-containing insulation, gaskets, packing, and fire-resistant materials were historically used in many of these systems.

Pipefitters, boiler workers, electricians, maintenance crews, turbine workers, insulators, and contractors may have worked around asbestos-containing materials during outages, repairs, valve replacement, insulation removal, and equipment rebuilds. Coal-fired power stations and industrial utility plants are especially important settings to review when building an exposure history.

Large turbine hall and power plant equipment with insulated steam piping
Power generation facilities often contained extensive mechanical systems, steam lines, boilers, turbines, valves, and insulation materials that are important to review in an asbestos exposure history.

Pipe insulation and mechanical systems

Pipe insulation is one of the most recognizable asbestos-containing materials in older industrial and commercial settings. In Pennsylvania facilities, thermal system insulation may have been present around steam lines, condensate lines, hot water pipes, boiler piping, elbows, fittings, tanks, and mechanical equipment.

These materials became a concern when they were damaged, deteriorated, repaired, cut, removed, or disturbed during maintenance and renovation work. Elbows, fittings, valves, and pipe penetrations were often areas where insulation was patched or replaced over time.

Older deteriorated insulated steam piping in a mechanical room
Older pipe insulation, steam systems, valves, and mechanical rooms are common topics when reviewing historical asbestos exposure in Pennsylvania industrial and commercial facilities.

Railroads, schools, public buildings, and commercial construction

Pennsylvania’s railroad, public infrastructure, school, hospital, courthouse, municipal, office, and commercial building history may also be relevant to asbestos exposure research. Older buildings may have used asbestos-containing floor tile, black mastic adhesive, pipe insulation, boiler insulation, ceiling materials, plaster, drywall joint compound, roofing, siding, and fireproofing.

In schools, asbestos management planning became important because materials could remain in place if they were intact and properly managed. Maintenance work, renovation, and demolition required special attention to avoid disturbing hidden materials above ceilings, inside pipe chases, under flooring, or in mechanical spaces.

Learn more about asbestos in schools and AHERA-style management plans.

Occupational and secondhand exposure in Pennsylvania

Occupational exposure may have occurred when Pennsylvania workers handled or worked near asbestos-containing materials. Jobs of interest can include steelworkers, shipyard workers, Navy personnel, railroad workers, power plant employees, pipefitters, insulators, plumbers, electricians, boiler workers, maintenance employees, demolition workers, construction trades, mechanics, refinery workers, foundry workers, and industrial laborers.

Secondhand exposure, also called take-home exposure, may have occurred when workers carried asbestos dust home on clothing, boots, tools, vehicles, hair, or laundry. Family members may have encountered fibers even if they did not work directly with asbestos-containing materials.

Educational reminder: Exposure history can be complicated because asbestos-related diseases may appear decades after the exposure occurred. Reviewing work history, job sites, products, building materials, military or shipyard service, railroad work, and household contact can help organize the information.

Asbestos-containing materials commonly found in Pennsylvania buildings and workplaces

  • Pipe insulation, boiler insulation, and thermal system insulation
  • Shipboard insulation, marine gaskets, packing, and engine room materials
  • Vinyl floor tile, sheet flooring, and black mastic adhesive
  • Industrial gaskets, packing, valves, pumps, and machinery components
  • Refractory materials, furnace linings, firebrick, and high-heat products
  • Ceiling texture, plaster, drywall joint compound, and fireproofing
  • Roofing materials, siding, cement board, and transite panels
  • Brake, clutch, and friction materials in certain older railroad and industrial applications

Mesothelioma, asbestosis, and other asbestos-related diseases

Asbestos exposure is associated with several serious diseases. Mesothelioma is a cancer of the mesothelium, the lining around certain organs. The most common form, pleural mesothelioma, affects the lining around the lungs. Asbestosis is a chronic lung disease involving scarring of lung tissue. Asbestos exposure is also associated with pleural plaques and an increased risk of lung cancer.

These diseases may take many years to develop after exposure. A person’s exposure history may include jobs or buildings from decades earlier, which is why older Pennsylvania industrial, maritime, railroad, commercial, school, and public building history can be relevant.

Educational Information

If you are trying to organize possible asbestos exposure history in Pennsylvania, it may help to write down job sites, employers, dates, industries, products, military or shipyard service, building materials, and whether any household exposure may have occurred.

Use the site’s educational resources to better understand asbestos exposure patterns, common materials, occupational settings, and disease-related terminology.

Why Pennsylvania Has Historically Experienced Significant Asbestos Exposure

Pennsylvania has long been one of the nation's most important centers for steel production, shipbuilding, railroads, power generation, manufacturing, construction, and public infrastructure. Many older industrial facilities and public buildings built before the 1980s relied heavily on asbestos-containing insulation, pipe coverings, boiler systems, gaskets, refractory materials, fireproofing products, floor tile, roofing, and mechanical equipment components.

Workers employed in steel mills, shipyards, power stations, rail facilities, factories, chemical plants, industrial maintenance, construction trades, schools, hospitals, and commercial buildings may have encountered asbestos-containing materials during installation, maintenance, repair, renovation, demolition, or equipment replacement activities.

Major Pennsylvania industrial regions historically associated with asbestos use include Pittsburgh, Bethlehem, Philadelphia, Erie, Allentown, Johnstown, Harrisburg, Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, and other steel, railroad, shipyard, manufacturing, and power-generation corridors.

Official Pennsylvania Government and Medical Resources

Individuals seeking additional information about asbestos exposure, mesothelioma, occupational health, environmental regulations, worker safety, veterans resources, and medical treatment options in Pennsylvania may find the following resources helpful.

Pennsylvania Health & Environmental Agencies

Pennsylvania Medical & Cancer Resources

Worker Safety & Occupational Exposure Resources

Mesothelioma & Public Health Information

Pennsylvania Veterans Resources