Asbestos-Based Acoustical Plaster — Keene Corporation

Product Description

Acoustical plaster was a specialty finishing material applied to interior ceilings and walls in commercial, institutional, and industrial buildings throughout much of the twentieth century. Unlike standard plaster, acoustical formulations were engineered to absorb sound, reduce reverberation, and improve the acoustic environment of large interior spaces. Schools, hospitals, auditoriums, office buildings, and manufacturing facilities commonly specified acoustical plaster as a cost-effective alternative to suspended ceiling tile systems, prizing its ability to conform to curved or irregular surfaces and produce a seamless finished appearance.

Keene Corporation was among the manufacturers that produced and marketed asbestos-based acoustical plaster during the decades when asbestos was widely incorporated into building materials. The company operated across multiple product lines, and its acoustical plaster products were distributed to construction projects and industrial facilities across the United States. Because acoustical plaster was applied as a spray or troweled coating, it was used extensively wherever noise control was a design or code requirement, embedding the product into a broad range of building types and occupancy categories.

Asbestos Content

Asbestos was incorporated into acoustical plaster formulations for several functional reasons. The mineral’s fibrous structure gave applied plaster coatings tensile reinforcement, reducing the tendency to crack or delaminate over time. Asbestos also provided thermal insulation properties and, critically for building owners and insurers, meaningful fire resistance—a selling point that drove widespread specification in public and commercial construction.

Chrysotile (white asbestos) was the fiber type most commonly used in plaster-based building products, though tremolite and other amphibole fibers have been identified as contaminants in some chrysotile ore sources, complicating the actual exposure profile of workers who handled these materials. The asbestos content in acoustical plaster products varied by formulation and production period. Materials mixed, applied, sanded, or disturbed during installation or later renovation released respirable asbestos fibers into the surrounding air, creating inhalation hazards that were not adequately communicated to the workers performing that work.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act (AHERA) and related federal regulations subsequently identified sprayed-on and troweled-on asbestos-containing surfacing materials—the category that encompasses acoustical plaster—as a priority hazard class in buildings, requiring inspection, management, and abatement protocols specifically because of the fiber release potential these materials present.

How Workers Were Exposed

Industrial workers and tradespeople who worked alongside or directly with Keene Corporation’s asbestos-based acoustical plaster faced inhalation exposure through multiple pathways across the product’s full life cycle.

Mixing and preparation involved opening bags of dry plaster compound and combining them with water, a process that generated clouds of airborne dust. Workers performing this task in enclosed or poorly ventilated areas inhaled fiber-laden dust before any protective measures were in place or understood to be necessary.

Spray application was among the highest-exposure tasks associated with acoustical plaster. Spray rigs atomized the wet plaster mixture and projected it onto ceiling and wall surfaces. The overspray that did not adhere to the target surface dispersed through the work area, settling on scaffolding, equipment, and workers below. Other tradespeople—electricians, pipefitters, ironworkers, and laborers—who were present in the same workspace during spray operations were exposed to airborne fibers even though they played no direct role in the plastering work itself.

Troweling and finishing required workers to smooth and texture the applied plaster while it was still workable, abrading the surface in ways that released additional fibers. Subsequent dry sanding to achieve specified surface finishes was particularly hazardous because it converted cured plaster into respirable dust.

Renovation, repair, and demolition work created renewed exposure long after original installation. Maintenance workers, remodelers, and abatement contractors who drilled, cut, sanded, or removed acoustical plaster from older buildings disturbed previously stable material and released fibers that had been locked in the cured coating for years or decades. OSHA regulations governing asbestos exposure in general industry and construction, codified at 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1001 and 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101 respectively, reflect the documented hazard that disturbance of asbestos-containing surfacing materials poses to workers.

The latency period for asbestos-related diseases—often ranging from ten to fifty years between exposure and diagnosis—means that workers exposed to Keene Corporation’s acoustical plaster products during peak installation decades continue to receive diagnoses of asbestos-related illness today.

Diseases associated with occupational asbestos exposure include mesothelioma (a malignancy of the pleural and peritoneal linings with a strong causal association to asbestos inhalation), asbestosis (progressive fibrotic scarring of lung tissue), lung cancer, and other respiratory conditions recognized in medical and regulatory literature as asbestos-related.

Keene Corporation faced substantial asbestos litigation arising from its manufacture and sale of asbestos-containing products, including acoustical plaster. As a result of that litigation and bankruptcy proceedings, the Keene Corporation Asbestos Settlement Trust was established to compensate individuals who sustained injuries caused by exposure to Keene Corporation asbestos-containing products.

The trust operates under a Trust Distribution Procedure that establishes eligibility criteria and claim categories. Individuals who were exposed to Keene Corporation’s asbestos-based acoustical plaster—or surviving family members of deceased claimants—may be eligible to file claims against the Keene Corporation Asbestos Settlement Trust.

Typical claim categories recognized by asbestos settlement trusts of this type include:

  • Mesothelioma — generally the highest-valued disease category given the direct causal link to asbestos exposure and the severity of the illness
  • Lung cancer — compensable when supported by documented occupational asbestos exposure and qualifying exposure history
  • Asbestosis and severe asbestosis — recognized as separate claim levels based on pulmonary function and radiographic findings
  • Other asbestos-related conditions — including pleural disease meeting defined diagnostic thresholds

To pursue a claim, claimants or their legal representatives are typically required to document the nature and duration of exposure to Keene Corporation products, establish a qualifying diagnosis through medical records and, in most cases, pathology or imaging evidence, and demonstrate that the exposure meets the trust’s exposure criteria for the relevant product.

Individuals who believe they or a family member were exposed to Keene Corporation’s asbestos-based acoustical plaster should consult an attorney experienced in asbestos trust fund claims. Because trust filing deadlines and statute of limitations periods vary by state and by individual circumstance, prompt legal consultation is advisable following any asbestos-related diagnosis.

The existence of the Keene Corporation Asbestos Settlement Trust does not preclude exploration of additional legal remedies against other potentially responsible parties, as workers exposed to acoustical plaster on job sites may have encountered products from multiple manufacturers.