Cargando…

A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.

Demolition of older housing for urban redevelopment purposes benefits communities by removing housing with lead paint and dust hazards and by creating spaces for lead paint-free housing and other community resources. This study was conducted to assess changes, if any, in ambient dust lead levels ass...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Farfel, Mark R, Orlova, Anna O, Lees, Peter S J, Rohde, Charles, Ashley, Peter J, Chisolm, J Julian
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241579/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12842778
_version_ 1782125447207714816
author Farfel, Mark R
Orlova, Anna O
Lees, Peter S J
Rohde, Charles
Ashley, Peter J
Chisolm, J Julian
author_facet Farfel, Mark R
Orlova, Anna O
Lees, Peter S J
Rohde, Charles
Ashley, Peter J
Chisolm, J Julian
author_sort Farfel, Mark R
collection PubMed
description Demolition of older housing for urban redevelopment purposes benefits communities by removing housing with lead paint and dust hazards and by creating spaces for lead paint-free housing and other community resources. This study was conducted to assess changes, if any, in ambient dust lead levels associated with demolition of blocks of older lead-containing row houses in Baltimore, Maryland (USA). In this article we present results based on dust-fall samples collected from fixed locations within 10 m of three demolition sites. In subsequent reports we will describe dust lead changes on streets, sidewalks, and residential floors within 100 m of the demolition sites. Geometric mean (GM) lead dust-fall rate increased by > 40-fold during demolition to 410 micro g Pb/m2/hr (2,700 micro g Pb/m2 per typical work day) and by > 6-fold during debris removal to 61 micro g Pb/m2/hr (440 micro g Pb/m2 per typical work day). Lead concentrations in dust fall also increased during demolition (GM, 2,600 mg/kg) and debris removal (GM, 1,500 mg/kg) compared with baseline (GM, 950 mg/kg). In the absence of dust-fall standards, the results were compared with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (U.S. EPA's) dust-lead surface loading standard for interior residential floors (40 micro g/ft2, equivalent to 431 micro g/m2); daily lead dust fall during demolition exceeded the U.S. EPA floor standard by 6-fold on average and as much as 81-fold on an individual sample basis. Dust fall is of public health concern because it settles on surfaces and becomes a pathway of ambient lead exposure and a potential pathway of residential exposure via tracking and blowing of exterior dust. The findings highlight the need to minimize demolition lead deposition and to educate urban planners, contractors, health agencies, and the public about lead and other community concerns so that society can maximize the benefits of future demolition activities nationwide.
format Text
id pubmed-1241579
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2003
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-12415792005-11-08 A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall. Farfel, Mark R Orlova, Anna O Lees, Peter S J Rohde, Charles Ashley, Peter J Chisolm, J Julian Environ Health Perspect Research Article Demolition of older housing for urban redevelopment purposes benefits communities by removing housing with lead paint and dust hazards and by creating spaces for lead paint-free housing and other community resources. This study was conducted to assess changes, if any, in ambient dust lead levels associated with demolition of blocks of older lead-containing row houses in Baltimore, Maryland (USA). In this article we present results based on dust-fall samples collected from fixed locations within 10 m of three demolition sites. In subsequent reports we will describe dust lead changes on streets, sidewalks, and residential floors within 100 m of the demolition sites. Geometric mean (GM) lead dust-fall rate increased by > 40-fold during demolition to 410 micro g Pb/m2/hr (2,700 micro g Pb/m2 per typical work day) and by > 6-fold during debris removal to 61 micro g Pb/m2/hr (440 micro g Pb/m2 per typical work day). Lead concentrations in dust fall also increased during demolition (GM, 2,600 mg/kg) and debris removal (GM, 1,500 mg/kg) compared with baseline (GM, 950 mg/kg). In the absence of dust-fall standards, the results were compared with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (U.S. EPA's) dust-lead surface loading standard for interior residential floors (40 micro g/ft2, equivalent to 431 micro g/m2); daily lead dust fall during demolition exceeded the U.S. EPA floor standard by 6-fold on average and as much as 81-fold on an individual sample basis. Dust fall is of public health concern because it settles on surfaces and becomes a pathway of ambient lead exposure and a potential pathway of residential exposure via tracking and blowing of exterior dust. The findings highlight the need to minimize demolition lead deposition and to educate urban planners, contractors, health agencies, and the public about lead and other community concerns so that society can maximize the benefits of future demolition activities nationwide. 2003-07 /pmc/articles/PMC1241579/ /pubmed/12842778 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Farfel, Mark R
Orlova, Anna O
Lees, Peter S J
Rohde, Charles
Ashley, Peter J
Chisolm, J Julian
A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.
title A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.
title_full A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.
title_fullStr A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.
title_full_unstemmed A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.
title_short A study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.
title_sort study of urban housing demolitions as sources of lead in ambient dust: demolition practices and exterior dust fall.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241579/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12842778
work_keys_str_mv AT farfelmarkr astudyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT orlovaannao astudyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT leespetersj astudyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT rohdecharles astudyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT ashleypeterj astudyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT chisolmjjulian astudyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT farfelmarkr studyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT orlovaannao studyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT leespetersj studyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT rohdecharles studyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT ashleypeterj studyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall
AT chisolmjjulian studyofurbanhousingdemolitionsassourcesofleadinambientdustdemolitionpracticesandexteriordustfall