GAF Vinyl Asbestos Floor Tile

Product Description

GAF Corporation manufactured vinyl asbestos floor tile (VAT) from approximately 1959 through 1981, producing one of the most widely installed commercial and residential flooring products of the mid-twentieth century. GAF—an acronym derived from General Aniline & Film Corporation—was among the largest flooring manufacturers in the United States during this period, and its vinyl asbestos tile lines were distributed through building supply distributors, flooring contractors, and retail home improvement channels across the country.

GAF vinyl asbestos floor tiles were marketed under several product lines and were available in a broad range of colors, patterns, and textures designed to mimic stone, terrazzo, and decorative inlay work. Standard tile dimensions were typically nine inches by nine inches or twelve inches by twelve inches, with a nominal thickness of approximately 1/8 inch. These tiles were marketed heavily for use in schools, hospitals, office buildings, retail spaces, and residential kitchens and basements—settings where durability and low maintenance costs were priorities for builders and property owners.

The product’s commercial success during the postwar construction boom meant that GAF vinyl asbestos tile was installed in an enormous number of structures that remain standing today. Buildings constructed or renovated between the late 1950s and early 1980s across the United States may still contain original GAF VAT beneath subsequent flooring layers or in undisturbed utility spaces.

Asbestos Content

GAF vinyl asbestos floor tile contained chrysotile asbestos at concentrations ranging from approximately 15 to 25 percent by weight. Chrysotile, sometimes called white asbestos, was the predominant fiber type used in the resilient flooring industry during this era. In vinyl asbestos tile, chrysotile fibers were compounded directly into the tile body during the manufacturing process, where they served multiple functional purposes: reinforcing the tile matrix, improving dimensional stability under temperature fluctuation, and enhancing resistance to cracking and wear.

The manufacturing process involved blending chrysotile fibers with vinyl resins, plasticizers, fillers such as limestone, and pigments under heat and pressure to form a homogeneous tile body. Because the asbestos was locked within the tile matrix, intact and undisturbed GAF VAT in good condition is generally considered to present a lower immediate fiber release risk than friable asbestos materials such as sprayed insulation. However, the material becomes a significant exposure hazard when the tiles are cut, sanded, scraped, broken, dry-buffed, or removed using mechanical methods—all of which are routine activities in flooring installation, maintenance, and demolition work.

Federal regulations adopted under the Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act (AHERA) and OSHA’s asbestos standards specifically address vinyl asbestos floor tile as a regulated asbestos-containing material (ACM). OSHA’s construction industry standard (29 CFR 1926.1101) classifies VAT removal as a Class II asbestos activity requiring specific work practices, respiratory protection, and worker training.

How Workers Were Exposed

Occupational asbestos exposure from GAF vinyl asbestos floor tile was concentrated among several trades who worked directly with the product throughout its lifecycle—from initial installation through maintenance, renovation, and eventual removal.

Floor Tile Installers and Flooring Mechanics faced the most direct and sustained exposures. During installation, workers cut tiles to fit using hand scribes, utility knives, and mechanical tile cutters. Cutting operations, particularly dry scoring and snapping, released chrysotile fibers into the breathing zone. Workers also dry-buffed installed floors using rotary floor machines to achieve a finished surface, a process that abraded the tile surface and generated airborne dust. Installers worked in enclosed spaces with limited ventilation—basements, corridors, and utility rooms—where fiber concentrations could accumulate.

Building Renovation Laborers encountered GAF VAT during demolition and gut-renovation projects. Removing existing tile to prepare a subfloor for new materials frequently involved prying, chiseling, scraping, or grinding the old tile. When heated with torches or mechanical heat guns to soften the adhesive bond—a common field technique—tiles broke apart and released fibers. Workers who did not know the tiles contained asbestos often performed this work without respiratory protection.

Custodial and Maintenance Workers experienced repeated, long-term low-level exposures through routine floor care. Dry sweeping, buffing with worn pads, and stripping old wax finish layers from GAF VAT surfaces all abraded the tile and generated fiber-containing dust. Because custodial workers performed these tasks repeatedly over careers spanning decades, cumulative exposure was a documented occupational concern.

Bystander exposures were also documented in settings where flooring work occurred in occupied or partially occupied buildings—including teachers and students in schools undergoing renovation, and office workers present during after-hours flooring repair.

GAF Corporation Asbestos Settlement Trust

A dedicated trust fund exists to compensate individuals harmed by asbestos-containing products manufactured by GAF Corporation. The GAF Corporation Asbestos Settlement Trust was established through GAF’s asbestos bankruptcy proceedings and is administered to process claims from workers and others who developed asbestos-related diseases attributable to exposure to GAF products, including GAF vinyl asbestos floor tile.

Eligible claimants may include:

  • Floor tile installers and flooring mechanics who cut, fitted, buffed, or otherwise disturbed GAF VAT during installation work performed between approximately 1959 and 1981
  • Renovation and demolition workers who removed or disturbed existing GAF vinyl asbestos tile during remodeling or building teardown projects
  • Custodial and maintenance workers who regularly buffed, stripped, or dry-swept floors covered with GAF VAT over extended periods
  • Secondary or household exposure claimants, such as family members of workers who brought asbestos-containing dust home on clothing and skin

Compensable diseases typically recognized in asbestos trust fund claims of this type include mesothelioma, lung cancer (with documented asbestos exposure history), asbestosis, and other asbestos-related pulmonary conditions diagnosed by a qualified physician.

To file a claim with the GAF Corporation Asbestos Settlement Trust, claimants or their legal representatives generally must provide medical documentation confirming an asbestos-related diagnosis, evidence of occupational or other exposure to GAF asbestos-containing products, and work history documentation supporting the claim. GAF vinyl asbestos floor tile is a named product eligible for trust fund consideration, and claimants should specifically identify GAF VAT and the manufacturer—GAF Corporation—in claim submissions.

Litigation Options

In addition to trust fund claims, individuals with documented asbestos-related disease may have litigation claims against other parties in the chain of liability, including product distributors, building owners, or other manufacturers whose asbestos-containing products contributed to cumulative exposure. An attorney experienced in asbestos litigation can assess the full scope of potential claims, identify all applicable trusts, and advise on whether active litigation against solvent defendants is appropriate given the specific exposure and disease history.

Individuals who believe they were exposed to GAF vinyl asbestos floor tile and have received an asbestos-related diagnosis are encouraged to consult a qualified asbestos attorney to evaluate all available legal remedies, including trust fund submissions and any applicable litigation options.