Refurbishment and Demolition Asbestos Survey Process: Scope, Sampling Density and Analyst Accreditation

Quick Answer: A refurbishment and demolition (R&D) survey is required under the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012 before any refurbishment or demolition work in a pre-2000 building that could disturb the fabric of the structure. It is more intrusive than a management survey — the surveyor must access all areas that will be disturbed, take physical samples for laboratory testing, and produce a report identifying every ACM in the affected zone. The survey must be carried out by a competent person; UKAS accreditation under the ISO 17020 inspection body standard is the expected benchmark for commercial surveys.

Summary

There are two types of asbestos survey in common use under CAR 2012: the management survey and the refurbishment and demolition (R&D) survey. This article covers the R&D survey — the more comprehensive of the two. The distinction matters because the consequences of missing an ACM in a management survey are different from missing one in an R&D survey. A management survey is about managing in-situ ACMs that are not going to be disturbed. An R&D survey is about finding every ACM in areas that are about to be physically disturbed, so that a plan for safe removal or management can be implemented before work starts.

The HSE surveying guidance document (HSG264) defines an R&D survey as intrusive, destructive, and comprehensive. The surveyor must lift floorboards, open ceilings, remove boxing, drill into structural elements, and access roof spaces, service voids, and plant rooms. Areas that cannot be accessed must be noted as unconfirmed and treated as presumed to contain asbestos until confirmed otherwise. The report must include a plan of all sampled and presumed ACM locations, condition assessments, and risk priority scores for each identified material.

For tradespeople, the practical implication is straightforward: if you are quoting or planning work that will disturb the fabric of a pre-2000 building — a bathroom strip-out, a kitchen refurb, removing a partition wall, replacing a boiler, fitting a new heating system, or partial demolition — the client needs an R&D survey first. If they do not have one, do not start the structural work. This is not an optional extra; it is a legal requirement under Regulation 4 and Regulation 7 of CAR 2012 (the duty to manage and the duty to identify before work starts).

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Survey Type When Required Access Level Sampling Report Output
Management survey Existing occupied building; routine management of in-situ ACMs Non-intrusive; accessible areas only Sampling of suspect materials; presumptions acceptable ACM register, condition ratings, management plan
R&D survey (refurbishment) Before any work disturbing fabric of pre-2000 building Intrusive; must access all areas to be disturbed Physical samples of all suspect materials in work zone Full ACM report for work zone; risk scores; removal recommendations
R&D survey (demolition) Before full or partial demolition Fully intrusive and destructive; every part of structure Comprehensive sampling of entire structure Complete ACM inventory for the whole structure
Reinspection Periodic update of existing management survey As per existing survey scope If new suspect materials found Updated ACM register

Detailed Guidance

When is an R&D Survey Required?

The trigger is work that will disturb the fabric of a pre-2000 building. The HSE takes a broad view of what constitutes "disturbing the fabric." This includes:

A management survey is not sufficient for any of the above. If a client presents you with a management survey and asks you to begin refurbishment work, check whether the survey covers the specific areas and materials that will be disturbed. If it does not, a further R&D survey is required for those areas.

The Surveying Process: Step by Step

Stage 1: Pre-survey preparation

The surveyor begins by reviewing available information about the building: planning records, building regulations applications, any existing asbestos surveys, construction dates, and known occupational history. This context informs which materials are likely to be present. An office block from 1965 has a different suspect ACM profile from a 1930s terraced house or a 1980s agricultural building.

The client must ensure the surveyor has unrestricted access to all areas to be included in the survey scope. Areas that cannot be accessed must be agreed in advance and noted in the report as unconfirmed.

Stage 2: Site survey — visual inspection and sampling

The surveyor systematically works through the building, recording all materials that could be ACMs. In an R&D survey, the surveyor will physically disturb finishes to inspect substrates: drilling through ceiling tiles to check above, lifting sections of flooring, opening service risers, removing screwed inspection panels. This is necessarily destructive in some areas.

For each suspect material, the surveyor assesses:

Stage 3: Bulk sampling

Physical samples are collected from each identified suspect material. Sampling protocol:

Homogeneous materials (the same material from the same area of application) can be grouped as a single material type with multiple samples. The surveyor uses professional judgement on whether materials are truly homogeneous — a ceiling tile in a ground-floor office and a ceiling tile in the basement may look identical but be from different manufacture runs.

Stage 4: Laboratory analysis

Samples are sent to a UKAS-accredited laboratory for analysis. The standard method is polarised light microscopy (PLM), which allows identification of asbestos fibre type. Results are typically returned within three to five working days for a standard service, or within one to two days for an express service (at higher cost).

The laboratory report identifies:

A result of "no asbestos detected" does not mean the sample is guaranteed asbestos-free — it means no asbestos was found in the sample analysed. Homogeneous area assessments can reduce this risk by taking multiple samples from the same material.

Stage 5: Report production

The completed R&D survey report includes:

Understanding the Risk Priority Score

HSG264 provides a risk priority scoring system for ACMs in buildings. The score combines two elements:

Material score — based on asbestos type and physical form:

Priority score — based on:

High risk priority scores indicate materials that should be removed or robustly encapsulated. Low scores indicate materials that can be managed in situ with periodic reinspection. The risk priority system is a tool for the asbestos management plan, not a pass/fail test for work commencement.

UKAS Accreditation and Surveyor Competence

UKAS accreditation for asbestos surveying is issued under ISO 17020 (inspection bodies). An accredited surveying organisation has been independently assessed against technical and quality standards covering: competence of personnel, sampling procedures, equipment calibration, quality management, and report format.

In practice, there are two levels at which to check competence:

  1. Organisation level — is the surveying company UKAS-accredited under ISO 17020? The UKAS public register lists accredited organisations and their scope of accreditation. Check that the scope includes asbestos surveying.
  2. Individual level — does the surveyor hold a relevant individual qualification? The BOHS P402 (Buildings Surveys and Bulk Sampling for Asbestos) is the benchmark. Some surveyors also hold the RSPH Award in Asbestos and P402 is the entry-level certificate for building surveyors.

For small domestic jobs, an unaccredited sole trader surveyor with P402 may be acceptable and significantly cheaper than a large accredited firm. For commercial, industrial, or public sector clients, UKAS accreditation at organisational level is typically required by the client's own procurement standards or insurer.

What the Survey Report Does Not Tell You

An R&D survey report identifies where ACMs are and their condition. It does not:

Any area that was not fully accessible at survey stage must be treated as containing asbestos until confirmed otherwise by further sampling or visual inspection when that area becomes accessible during the work.

Frequently Asked Questions

The client has an old management survey from 2015. Is that sufficient before I start work?

Probably not — it depends on the scope and age of the survey. A management survey is not designed for pre-refurbishment work. If the scope did not include intrusive inspection of the areas you will be disturbing, the survey does not meet the Regulation 7 requirement. The client needs an R&D survey for the specific areas and materials to be disturbed. Additionally, the 2015 survey may not reflect changes in building condition since then.

Can I carry out an R&D survey myself as the contractor?

Only if you are competent to do so — which in practice means holding BOHS P402 or equivalent certification and having the equipment and procedures to take and submit bulk samples. Most contractors subcontract survey work to a specialist. Carrying out a survey on your own project creates a potential conflict of interest; UKAS-accredited firms are required to manage conflicts of interest under their accreditation conditions.

What happens if ACMs are found during the R&D survey?

The survey report will include recommendations: remove before work, encapsulate, or manage in situ. For each ACM in the work zone, the client must arrange appropriate action before the refurbishment contractor begins work on that area. Licensed ACMs (lagging, AIB) require a licensed removal contractor. Non-licensed ACMs can be handled by a non-licensed contractor with appropriate controls. The asbestos work must be completed and cleared before the main refurbishment work proceeds in that area.

How much does an R&D survey cost?

Costs vary significantly. A small domestic extension or kitchen strip-out survey might cost £250–£600. A medium commercial office strip-out survey might be £800–£2,000. A large industrial building or full demolition survey can run to several thousand pounds. Laboratory testing is usually included in the surveyor's quote but confirm this. Always use a UKAS-accredited or P402-qualified surveyor — the false economy of using an unqualified surveyor is rarely worth the liability risk.

Do I need an R&D survey for a property built after 2000?

Generally no — asbestos products were banned in new construction in the UK in November 1999. A building with a demonstrated construction date of 2000 or later using contemporary materials does not require an asbestos survey. However, exercise caution where: the building incorporates older structure (e.g. a Victorian house with a 2002 extension — the original fabric still needs assessment); the construction date is uncertain; or there is evidence of earlier materials being reused in the newer build.

Regulations & Standards