Transite Cement Pipe and Board — Johns-Manville
Product Description
Transite was a registered trade name used by Johns-Manville Corporation to market a line of fiber-reinforced cement products manufactured for industrial, commercial, and residential construction applications. The Transite product line included cement pipe, flat board, corrugated sheet, and specialty panels produced across several decades of the twentieth century. Johns-Manville sold Transite products widely throughout North America, and the name became closely associated with asbestos-cement construction materials in the building trades.
Transite pipe was designed as a durable alternative to clay or cast-iron pipe for applications including water distribution mains, sewer systems, conduit for electrical utilities, and industrial process piping. The board and sheet variants were marketed for uses ranging from laboratory countertops and fume hood liners to roofing panels, ceiling systems, fireproofing assemblies, wall cladding, and duct lining in heating and ventilation systems. Because the cement matrix provided chemical resistance and the fiber reinforcement added tensile strength, Transite became a preferred material in chemical plants, power generation facilities, schools, hospitals, and commercial buildings throughout the mid-twentieth century.
Johns-Manville, headquartered in Denver, Colorado, was one of the largest manufacturers of asbestos-containing materials in the United States. The company operated mines, mills, and fabrication facilities across North America and maintained a dominant market position in asbestos-cement products for decades. Internal corporate documents produced during asbestos litigation revealed that Johns-Manville executives were aware of the health hazards associated with asbestos exposure well before those risks were publicly disclosed to workers or consumers.
Asbestos Content
Transite products were manufactured using chrysotile asbestos and, in certain product formulations, amphibole asbestos fibers including amosite. The asbestos fiber served as the primary reinforcing component within the Portland cement matrix, providing tensile strength, thermal resistance, and dimensional stability that would not otherwise be achievable with cement alone.
Asbestos content in Transite cement products was substantial by weight. The fiber was uniformly distributed throughout the cured product rather than confined to a surface coating, meaning that any mechanical action capable of disturbing the material — cutting, drilling, grinding, sawing, or abrasive wear — could release respirable asbestos fibers into the surrounding air.
In its undisturbed, fully cured state, Transite is generally classified as a non-friable asbestos-containing material under AHERA (Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act) standards. However, AHERA and OSHA regulations recognize that non-friable asbestos-cement products can become friable through physical damage, weathering, deterioration, or renovation activities. Once Transite pipe or board is broken, cut, or abraded, the distinction between friable and non-friable loses practical significance for workers in the immediate area.
How Workers Were Exposed
Because Transite pipe and board were installed across a broad range of industries and construction settings, the population of workers with documented or potential exposure is correspondingly large. Exposure occurred both during original installation and during subsequent maintenance, renovation, and demolition work.
Pipefitters and plumbers cutting Transite pipe sections to length using hand saws, power saws, or abrasive cutting wheels generated visible dust clouds containing airborne asbestos fibers. Pipe joints were often trimmed and fitted in enclosed trenches or mechanical rooms where natural ventilation was minimal, concentrating airborne fiber levels near the worker.
Construction laborers and carpenters installing Transite board, roofing panels, or ceiling systems cut sheets with circular saws and routers, operations that industrial hygiene records document as generating high concentrations of respirable dust in the breathing zone.
HVAC workers and sheet metal mechanics encountered Transite duct liners and plenum materials during installation of heating and ventilation systems in commercial buildings and industrial plants. Fitting these components into ductwork assemblies required cutting and shaping operations.
Electricians installing conduit systems sometimes cut and coupled Transite electrical duct, and may have encountered existing installations when pulling wire through aging systems.
Chemical plant operators and maintenance workers in facilities that relied on Transite for fume hood liners, laboratory bench surfaces, and acid-resistant process enclosures were exposed during routine maintenance and during replacement of worn or damaged sections.
Demolition and renovation workers encountered Transite materials in existing structures, where weathered or mechanically damaged pipe and board could release fibers under conditions less controlled than original installation. School renovation projects have been a documented source of AHERA-regulated Transite removal activity.
Roofing contractors removing or repairing Transite corrugated panels on older industrial and agricultural buildings have been identified as an exposure group in both regulatory guidance and litigation records.
OSHA’s asbestos standards at 29 CFR 1910.1001 (general industry) and 29 CFR 1926.1101 (construction) establish a permissible exposure limit (PEL) of 0.1 fiber per cubic centimeter as an eight-hour time-weighted average. Operations involving cutting or grinding of asbestos-cement products are classified as Class III or Class IV asbestos work under the construction standard and require specific engineering controls, respiratory protection, and worker training. These regulatory requirements reflect documented evidence that mechanical disturbance of asbestos-cement materials generates fiber concentrations capable of causing disease.
Documented Trust Fund / Legal Options
Manville Personal Injury Settlement Trust
Johns-Manville Corporation filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1982, citing asbestos liability as a primary factor. As part of the reorganization plan confirmed by the bankruptcy court, the Manville Personal Injury Settlement Trust (commonly referred to as the Manville Trust) was established to compensate individuals injured by exposure to Johns-Manville asbestos-containing products, including all products manufactured and sold under the Transite trade name.
The Manville Trust is one of the largest asbestos compensation trusts established in the United States and has processed claims from hundreds of thousands of claimants. The trust operates under Trust Distribution Procedures (TDPs) that define eligible diseases, documentation requirements, and payment schedules.
Eligible disease categories recognized by the Manville Trust for compensable claims generally include:
- Mesothelioma — a malignant cancer of the pleura or peritoneum causally associated with asbestos exposure
- Lung cancer — with documented asbestos exposure history and, under most TDP criteria, evidence of an asbestos-related pulmonary condition
- Asbestosis — a fibrotic lung disease caused by inhalation of asbestos fibers
- Other asbestos-related conditions — including pleural disease meeting specified diagnostic criteria
Filing eligibility requires documentation demonstrating exposure to a Johns-Manville product. For Transite claims, eligible evidence includes employment records placing a claimant at a worksite where Transite pipe or board was installed, cut, or removed; co-worker affidavits; contractor records; or other documentation establishing product-specific exposure to Transite as manufactured by Johns-Manville.
Claimants or their families should retain an attorney experienced in asbestos trust fund claims. Statute of limitations periods applicable to trust claims vary by jurisdiction and are typically measured from the date of diagnosis or the date the claimant knew or should have known of the connection between the illness and asbestos exposure. Prompt consultation with legal counsel is advisable to preserve filing rights.
In addition to the Manville Trust, individuals who worked with Transite in settings where other manufacturers’ asbestos products were also present may have claims against multiple trusts or through civil litigation against other defendants, depending on the specific products and companies involved in their exposure history.