Asbestos Removal in Beaumont, CA — MoldRx
Licensed Asbestos Removal Professionals Serving Beaumont and the San Gorgonio Pass
Asbestos is not a problem you postpone, and it is not a problem you handle yourself. Beaumont — approximately 60,000 residents, ZIP code 92223, a former railroad town at roughly 2,600 feet in the San Gorgonio Pass between the San Bernardino Mountains and the San Jacinto Mountains — contains properties spanning every major construction era from the early 1900s through the massive subdivision boom of the 2000s. When asbestos-containing materials in those properties are disturbed during renovation, demolition, or through decades of pass-wind stress and extreme thermal cycling, they release microscopic fibers that cause fatal diseases with no cure. California law is unambiguous: asbestos abatement must be performed by licensed, certified professionals following strict regulatory protocols. There is no legal shortcut and no safe DIY method. MoldRx only sends vetted, licensed abatement professionals who work in full compliance with EPA NESHAP, OSHA 1926.1101, Cal/OSHA Title 8 Section 1529, and SCAQMD Rule 1403.
Request your free estimate — we will assess your Beaumont property and explain your options.
Why Beaumont Properties May Contain Asbestos
Beaumont sits at the summit of the San Gorgonio Pass in western Riverside County, where the pass funnels between Mount San Gorgonio to the north and Mount San Jacinto to the south. At roughly 2,600 feet elevation, the city experiences a hot-summer Mediterranean climate with temperature extremes amplified by its inland pass position — summer highs regularly reaching the mid-90s to 100 degrees, winter lows dipping into the mid-30s, and relentless wind exposure that sets this city apart from virtually every other community in the Inland Empire. That combination of extreme climate and a housing stock now spanning more than a century makes asbestos risk in Beaumont a serious, present concern.
Construction Era and Asbestos Use
Asbestos was used extensively in American construction from the 1920s through the late 1970s. The EPA began restricting it in the late 1970s, but manufacturers exhausted existing inventory well into the mid-1980s. Any property built before 1980 should be presumed to contain asbestos until professional testing proves otherwise, and homes built through the mid-1980s also warrant testing.
Beaumont's construction history begins with the railroad. The San Gorgonio Pass was surveyed in 1853 during a government expedition under Lieutenant R.S. Williamson. By the 1860s, stagecoach lines served the area through a stop known as Edgar Station. In 1875, the Southern Pacific Railroad laid tracks through the modern-day location of Beaumont and established Summit Station — a rest stop for travelers heading between the Mojave Desert and the Los Angeles basin. The town was incorporated on November 18, 1912. For most of the twentieth century, Beaumont remained a small, quiet pass community. The original downtown — centered along 6th Street and Beaumont Avenue — filled in slowly with homes, commercial buildings, and civic structures from the 1910s through the 1960s. These are the oldest structures in the city, built during the peak decades of asbestos use, and many contain ACMs in original plaster, pipe insulation, floor tiles, roofing materials, and heating systems.
The decisive transformation came after 2000. Southern California residents discovered Beaumont's affordable housing relative to coastal markets, and the city's population surged from approximately 13,000 to over 60,000 residents in two decades — making it one of the fastest-growing cities in the state. Master-planned communities went up rapidly: Sundance north of the I-10 along Highland Springs Avenue, Tournament Hills west of the freeway near Tukwet Canyon (constructed 2005 through 2014), Fairway Canyon and Solera at Oak Valley on the former Oak Valley Golf Course area, Four Seasons by K. Hovnanian, Three Rings Ranch, and Olivewood. While these newer developments carry lower asbestos risk than the historic core, they are not risk-free — early 2000s construction sometimes used materials from existing inventory, and any renovation of original components in homes now 20-plus years old should include testing.
This construction timeline places Beaumont's older housing stock — the downtown core along 6th Street and Beaumont Avenue, the mid-century homes along Pennsylvania Avenue and Highland Springs Avenue, and the 1960s and 1970s properties scattered throughout the original town footprint — squarely within the peak decades of asbestos use. Meanwhile, the rapid 2000s growth means thousands of homeowners are now reaching the point where their relatively newer homes need their first major renovations, raising the question of what materials were used during that frantic building boom.
Common Asbestos-Containing Materials in Beaumont Homes
Beaumont's housing ranges from early twentieth-century structures near downtown to mid-century ranch homes, 1960s and 1970s properties, and the wave of master-planned construction from the 2000s. In properties built before 1985, asbestos is commonly found in:
- 9x9-inch floor tiles and black mastic adhesive — the single most common ACM in residential properties nationwide, found extensively in mid-century and 1960s-1970s homes throughout Beaumont's original neighborhoods
- Popcorn (acoustic) ceiling texture — widely applied from the 1950s through the early 1980s, prevalent in ranch-style homes and tract construction across Beaumont
- Pipe insulation and duct wrap — especially common in homes with original HVAC systems working overtime in Beaumont's extreme pass climate
- Roof materials and adhesives — shingles, felts, and mastics degraded by decades of direct sun, thermal cycling, and relentless San Gorgonio Pass winds
- Vermiculite attic insulation — particularly Zonolite brand, frequently contaminated with tremolite asbestos, common in attics where insulation was added to combat summer heat and winter cold at 2,600 feet
- Textured wall coatings and joint compound — used in wall finishing from the 1940s through the early 1980s
- Exterior stucco and plaster — asbestos was mixed into stucco for strength and fire resistance, standard in Southern California construction
- Transite siding and cement-asbestos products — exterior materials prized for fire resistance and durability in a high-wind, fire-prone environment
- Furnace cement, gaskets, and boiler insulation — in older heating systems throughout Beaumont homes, where cold winter nights at elevation demanded reliable heating
When Asbestos Becomes Dangerous
Intact, undisturbed asbestos materials do not automatically release fibers. The danger begins when materials are disturbed. Friable materials — pipe insulation, sprayed-on ceiling texture, deteriorating duct wrap — release fibers easily. Non-friable materials — floor tiles, transite siding, cement board — become hazardous when cut, sanded, drilled, or broken. Tearing out old flooring, scraping popcorn ceilings, or demolishing walls in a pre-1980 Beaumont home without testing first can contaminate the entire structure in minutes.
Beaumont-Specific Risk Factors
Several factors specific to Beaumont elevate asbestos urgency beyond standard inland risk.
San Gorgonio Pass wind exposure. Beaumont sits in one of the windiest corridors in the United States. The San Gorgonio Pass funnels air between the San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountain ranges, producing sustained winds that batter building exteriors year after year. When ACMs on roofing, siding, or exterior surfaces crack and shed fibers, those fibers do not settle quietly — they are caught and dispersed by pass winds. Inside the home, low humidity means airborne fibers remain suspended longer, extending the exposure window for every occupant. The same wind corridor that powers the thousands of wind turbines east of Beaumont relentlessly stresses the building materials on every home in the city.
Extreme thermal cycling at elevation. At 2,600 feet, Beaumont experiences wider temperature swings than lower-elevation Inland Empire communities. Summer highs push past 100 degrees. Winter lows drop into the mid-30s — sometimes below freezing. That constant expansion and contraction over 40, 50, or 60 years cracks pipe insulation, loosens ceiling textures, fractures roofing materials, and degrades the adhesives holding floor tiles in place. Materials that might remain stable for decades in a mild coastal environment deteriorate significantly faster under Beaumont's relentless thermal stress.
Seismic vulnerability. Beaumont is located in a seismically active zone. The San Gorgonio Pass thrust fault — a 35-kilometer-long fault with probable magnitudes of M6.0 to M7.0 — runs through the area. The San Jacinto Fault Zone, one of California's most active with slip rates of 7 to 17 millimeters per year and probable magnitudes of M6.5 to M7.5, passes nearby. Any seismic event can crack walls, shift foundations, and convert non-friable asbestos into friable hazards overnight. The combination of aging infrastructure, seismic stress, and extreme climate cycling makes professional assessment essential.
Wildfire risk and pass-wind fire acceleration. Beaumont faces significant wildfire risk. The San Gorgonio Pass acts as a natural wind tunnel during Santa Ana events, with gusts regularly reaching 40 to 50 miles per hour. Research shows that burned area per day is 3.5 to 4.5 times larger on Santa Ana wind days than on non-Santa Ana days. When structures containing asbestos burn, fibers are carried for miles on pass winds. The intersection of aging housing stock, extreme wind exposure, and elevated fire risk makes proactive testing and abatement in Beaumont more urgent than in many other Riverside County communities.
Rapid-growth renovation cycle. Beaumont's explosive growth from 13,000 to 60,000 residents in two decades means the earliest wave of 2000s-era homes — Sundance, Tournament Hills, Fairway Canyon — is now 20-plus years old. Homeowners are beginning major renovations: kitchen remodels, flooring replacement, bathroom updates, ADU additions. Any project disturbing original materials in these homes should include testing. Meanwhile, the smaller inventory of pre-1980 homes near downtown and along the original town corridors faces ongoing renovation pressure as property values climb and owners invest in modernizing aging structures.
When Asbestos Removal Is Required
Before Renovation or Demolition
California law and SCAQMD Rule 1403 require an asbestos survey before any renovation or demolition. Remodeling a kitchen in a downtown Beaumont home near 6th Street, replacing flooring in a Tournament Hills property, scraping popcorn ceilings in a 1970s home along Pennsylvania Avenue, updating HVAC in any pre-1980 structure, or demolishing any building in Beaumont — testing must come first. This is not a recommendation — it is law. The requirement applies regardless of when the structure was built, the size of the renovation, or whether you believe asbestos is present.
When Materials Are Damaged or Deteriorating
Friable asbestos materials that are crumbling, water-damaged, or visibly deteriorating require professional attention immediately. In Beaumont's older homes — near downtown along 6th Street and Beaumont Avenue, along Highland Springs Avenue, near the original railroad corridor — decades of extreme pass-wind exposure, thermal cycling, and seismic stress may have already compromised materials that were stable when first installed.
Real Estate Transactions
California Civil Code requires sellers to disclose known asbestos hazards. While the state does not mandate removal before sale, buyers increasingly require testing as part of due diligence. In Beaumont's growing market — where affordability relative to coastal Southern California continues to attract new residents — a clean asbestos clearance report protects both sides of the transaction and prevents costly renegotiations at closing.
After Professional Testing Confirms ACMs
No removal should begin without laboratory-confirmed results from an NVLAP-accredited lab. Only after testing confirms ACM presence, type, and condition can a proper abatement plan be developed.
Our Asbestos Removal Process
The professionals MoldRx sends to your Beaumont property follow a six-phase process governed by federal, state, and regional rules — designed for complete compliance and maximum safety.
1. Pre-Abatement Survey and Testing
A certified inspector surveys your property, identifies suspect materials, and collects samples for NVLAP-accredited laboratory analysis (PLM or TEM). The survey follows AHERA protocols and documents every material tested, its location, condition, and asbestos content. In Beaumont's older homes, the inspector pays particular attention to original flooring, popcorn ceilings, pipe insulation, stucco, roofing materials, and HVAC components — materials subjected to decades of pass-wind stress and thermal cycling.
2. Regulatory Notification
SCAQMD Rule 1403 requires advance written notification for projects disturbing more than 100 square feet of intact ACM — at least 10 working days before renovation and at least 14 days before demolition. Cal/OSHA DOSH requires notification and contractor registration. All permits — including City of Beaumont building permits — are obtained before work begins.
3. Containment and Worker Protection
The work area is completely isolated using polyethylene sheeting and HEPA-filtered negative-pressure air scrubbers. Workers wear full PPE including NIOSH-approved respirators with P100 HEPA filters and disposable protective suits per OSHA 1926.1101. Critical barriers seal every doorway and HVAC register to prevent fiber migration — especially important in Beaumont homes where forced-air systems working against pass-wind infiltration can spread contamination through ductwork. Wind-side containment receives additional reinforcement given Beaumont's persistent wind exposure.
4. Wet Removal and Abatement
All ACMs are thoroughly wetted before removal to suppress fiber release — a core requirement under both NESHAP and OSHA. Materials are carefully removed using hand tools to minimize breakage. Glovebag techniques handle pipe insulation; larger projects use amended water for better fiber suppression. Continuous air monitoring tracks fiber levels inside and outside the containment throughout the process.
5. Disposal
Removed asbestos waste is double-bagged in labeled 6-mil polyethylene bags, placed in rigid containers, and transported to an approved disposal landfill with a waste manifest documenting chain of custody — a legal document that protects you.
6. Air Monitoring and Clearance Testing
After removal and cleaning, an independent air monitoring professional collects samples analyzed by TEM or Phase Contrast Microscopy (PCM). Clearance requires fiber concentrations below 0.01 f/cc. Only after clearance testing confirms safe conditions is the containment dismantled. You receive a complete clearance report — your permanent record that the work was performed safely.
Asbestos Removal vs. Encapsulation
Not every asbestos situation requires full removal. Encapsulation — applying a sealant that binds fibers in place — is sometimes an acceptable alternative for non-friable materials in good condition that will not be disturbed. It is faster and less invasive than removal.
However, encapsulation does not eliminate the asbestos — it only contains it temporarily. In Beaumont's San Gorgonio Pass environment — where relentless wind exposure batters building exteriors year-round, where extreme thermal cycling between triple-digit summers and freezing winter nights stresses encapsulants to failure, where the San Gorgonio Pass thrust fault and San Jacinto Fault Zone can crack encapsulated surfaces without warning, and where the rapid-growth renovation cycle means today's encapsulated material will almost certainly be disturbed by tomorrow's remodel — removal is often the more definitive solution. California regulations require removal before demolition regardless. The professionals MoldRx sends will give you an honest assessment: if encapsulation is sufficient, they will tell you. If removal is necessary, they will explain why.
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Regulations That Govern Asbestos Removal in California
Asbestos abatement operates under a layered regulatory framework. These regulations protect you, your family, and your community — and violations carry severe penalties.
Federal: EPA NESHAP
The National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) under the Clean Air Act establish baseline federal requirements — inspection before demolition or renovation, proper notification, wet methods during removal, and disposal at approved facilities.
Federal: OSHA 1926.1101
OSHA's Construction Industry Standard (29 CFR 1926.1101) establishes a permissible exposure limit (PEL) of 0.1 f/cc over an 8-hour TWA, requires medical surveillance and specific training, and dictates engineering controls including containment, ventilation, and PPE.
California: Cal/OSHA Title 8 Section 1529
California's asbestos standard meets or exceeds federal OSHA — requiring contractor registration with DOSH, AHERA-accredited training (4-day initial plus annual refreshers), and medical monitoring. DOSH inspects active abatement projects throughout Riverside County. Contractors engaging in asbestos work involving 100 square feet or more must register with Cal/OSHA.
Regional: SCAQMD Rule 1403
Beaumont falls within South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) jurisdiction. Rule 1403 governs asbestos emissions from demolition and renovation — requiring pre-project surveys, advance notification for projects disturbing more than 100 square feet of intact ACM, adequate wetting, and proper waste disposal. The survey requirement applies regardless of building age. Failure to comply can result in fines upwards of $20,000 per day or criminal prosecution.
Licensing: CSLB C-22 Requirements
California law requires asbestos abatement be performed by contractors holding a C-22 Asbestos Abatement license from the CSLB. Workers must hold current ASB certification and complete EPA-accredited training — 40 hours initial plus 8-hour annual refreshers. Every professional MoldRx sends holds the required licenses and current training.
Health Risks of Asbestos Exposure
Asbestos exposure causes serious, often fatal diseases. There is no safe level of exposure according to OSHA.
Mesothelioma
An aggressive cancer of the lining of the lungs, abdomen, or heart — caused almost exclusively by asbestos exposure. Incurable in most cases, with median survival of 12 to 21 months. Even brief, one-time exposure can trigger this disease decades later.
Asbestosis
A chronic lung disease caused by inhaling asbestos fibers that permanently scar lung tissue. Progressive difficulty breathing, persistent coughing, reduced lung capacity. No cure — only symptom management.
Lung Cancer
Asbestos exposure significantly increases lung cancer risk, with the danger multiplying dramatically when combined with smoking.
Latency Period
Asbestos-related diseases typically do not appear until 10 to 50 years after exposure. A Beaumont homeowner who disturbs ACMs during a weekend renovation may not develop symptoms for decades. The families scraping popcorn ceilings in 1970s homes near downtown, replacing flooring in older properties along Highland Springs Avenue, or renovating pre-1980 structures anywhere in the San Gorgonio Pass corridor face exposure risks whose consequences will not appear for 20 to 40 years. By the time symptoms appear, the damage is irreversible. Do not wait.
For authoritative information, consult the EPA asbestos page and OSHA's asbestos safety topics.
What Sets MoldRx Apart
- Licensed, certified, compliant. Every professional holds a CSLB C-22 license, EPA-accredited training, and works in full compliance with Cal/OSHA Title 8, OSHA 1926.1101, and SCAQMD Rule 1403.
- Full regulatory documentation. SCAQMD notifications, waste manifests, NVLAP lab results, and clearance reports — everything for compliance, real estate transactions, and insurance.
- Honest assessment. If encapsulation is sufficient, we will tell you. If removal is necessary, you will understand why. No upselling. No minimizing genuine hazards.
- Family-owned accountability. MoldRx was built by two friends who saw an industry that desperately needed more honesty and transparency. We only send vetted professionals verified for licensing, insurance, training, and track record.
Beaumont Neighborhoods and Areas We Serve
MoldRx sends licensed asbestos abatement professionals throughout Beaumont and the surrounding San Gorgonio Pass communities. Each area of the city carries its own construction history and asbestos risk profile.
Historic Downtown and Original Town Center — Beaumont's oldest neighborhood, centered along 6th Street and Beaumont Avenue near City Hall, the Beaumont Civic Center, and the original Southern Pacific Railroad corridor. Structures here date from the early 1900s through the 1960s — homes, commercial buildings, and civic structures built during the peak decades of asbestos use. This is the highest-risk zone in Beaumont. Original plaster, pipe insulation, floor tiles, popcorn ceilings, transite materials, and heating system components in these properties should be presumed to contain asbestos until testing proves otherwise.
Pennsylvania Avenue and Highland Springs Avenue Corridors — Mid-century and 1960s-1970s residential properties along the city's original arterial roads. Ranch-style homes and modest tract construction from this era routinely contain 9x9 floor tiles with asbestos-containing mastic, popcorn ceiling texture, pipe wrap, joint compound, and original HVAC insulation. These corridors also include some of the properties most affected by the at-grade railroad crossing, with years of vibration stress on aging materials.
Sundance — A large master-planned community north of the I-10 along Highland Springs Avenue, with some construction still in progress. The earliest phases date to the mid-2000s. While primarily post-asbestos construction, homes now approaching or exceeding 20 years old are entering their first major renovation cycle. Original mechanical systems, roofing materials, and any components sourced during the transition period warrant testing before disturbance.
Tournament Hills — A gated community west of the I-10 near Tukwet Canyon, constructed between 2005 and 2014. Lower asbestos risk than the historic core, but early-phase homes are now 20 years old and entering renovation age. Testing before any major renovation is a prudent precaution.
Fairway Canyon and Oak Valley — Communities developed on the former Oak Valley Golf Course area west of the freeway. Construction spans from the early 2000s through more recent phases. Similar risk profile to Tournament Hills — primarily newer construction but warranting assessment before renovation of original components.
Solera at Oak Valley Greens — A Del Webb active-adult community. Newer construction with lower inherent asbestos risk, but testing remains advisable before any renovation that disturbs original materials, particularly mechanical systems and roofing.
Four Seasons, Three Rings Ranch, and Olivewood — Additional master-planned communities built during Beaumont's 2000s growth wave. Each carries the same consideration: newer construction lowers inherent risk, but homes now reaching 15 to 20 years old are entering renovation cycles where testing before disturbance protects homeowners from unexpected ACMs.
Cherry Valley — The unincorporated community north of Beaumont with a mix of older rural properties, equestrian lots, and scattered mid-century homes. Older structures in Cherry Valley — particularly those built in the 1950s through 1970s — carry significant asbestos risk. Rural properties that have never been professionally inspected warrant particular attention.
Nearby Communities We Also Serve
MoldRx also serves Banning, Calimesa, San Jacinto, Hemet, Yucaipa, Redlands, Moreno Valley, Riverside, and properties throughout unincorporated Riverside County.
Related Services in Beaumont
-> All remediation services in Beaumont
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it legal to remove asbestos myself in California?
California law requires asbestos abatement be performed by C-22 licensed contractors. A narrow exemption exists for homeowners removing small quantities of non-friable asbestos from their own single-family residence, but containment, wet methods, disposal, and notification requirements still apply. Improper removal can contaminate your entire home, expose your family to deadly fibers, and result in substantial fines. Professional abatement is the only responsible course of action.
How do I know if my Beaumont home has asbestos?
The only way to confirm asbestos is laboratory testing by an NVLAP-accredited lab — visual inspection cannot identify it. If your Beaumont property was built before 1980, it very likely contains asbestos. Properties through the mid-1980s should also be tested. A certified inspector collects samples for PLM or TEM analysis, with results typically in three to five business days.
My Beaumont home was built during the 2000s boom. Could it still contain asbestos?
While homes built after the late 1980s carry significantly lower asbestos risk, they are not guaranteed asbestos-free. Some construction materials manufactured into the early 1990s used remaining asbestos inventory. More importantly, homes now 20-plus years old are entering their first major renovation cycle — and any renovation of original materials should include testing as a precaution, regardless of construction date. SCAQMD Rule 1403 requires a survey before renovation regardless of building age.
I am renovating an older home in Beaumont. Do I need asbestos testing first?
Yes — this is a legal requirement, not a suggestion. SCAQMD Rule 1403 requires an asbestos survey before any renovation or demolition regardless of building age. Disturbing ACMs without proper abatement exposes everyone in the home to potentially fatal fibers and can result in fines exceeding $20,000 per day.
How long does asbestos removal take?
Most residential projects in Beaumont take two to five days depending on scope. Small projects like pipe insulation removal may be completed in one to two days; whole-house ceiling abatement or multi-material removal in larger homes takes longer. SCAQMD Rule 1403 requires advance notice, and demolition projects require notification at least 14 days in advance — plan accordingly.
Can I stay in my home during asbestos removal?
For small, contained projects you may remain in unaffected sections of your home. Larger projects — multiple rooms, whole-house ceiling removal, or HVAC-connected materials — typically require temporary relocation. Your abatement team will determine the safest approach based on the scope and layout of your specific Beaumont property.
What is the difference between friable and non-friable asbestos?
Friable asbestos crumbles under hand pressure (pipe insulation, ceiling textures, sprayed-on fireproofing) and releases fibers easily. Non-friable materials (floor tiles, transite siding, cement board) are less hazardous when intact but become dangerous when cut, broken, or sanded. Both types require professional handling under California law.
Does Beaumont's wind affect asbestos risk?
Yes. Beaumont sits in the San Gorgonio Pass — one of the windiest corridors in the United States. When exterior ACMs deteriorate or interior materials are disturbed, pass winds can disperse fibers rapidly. Low humidity means fibers remain airborne longer than in coastal environments. This makes containment during abatement particularly critical in Beaumont, and it makes proactive testing and removal more urgent than in less wind-exposed communities.
What happens to the asbestos after removal?
Removed asbestos waste is double-bagged in labeled 6-mil polyethylene bags, placed in rigid containers, and transported by licensed haulers to approved disposal landfills. A waste manifest documents chain of custody — a legal document you receive as part of your project records. Asbestos waste cannot go in regular trash or standard disposal facilities.
Will my homeowner's insurance cover asbestos removal?
Standard homeowner's policies typically exclude asbestos abatement. However, if ACMs are damaged by a covered peril — earthquake, fire, or water intrusion — your policy may cover abatement as part of the broader claim. Given Beaumont's seismic exposure to the San Gorgonio Pass thrust fault and San Jacinto Fault Zone, its elevated wildfire risk during Santa Ana wind events, and its susceptibility to water intrusion during heavy pass-area storms, review your policy language and consult your insurer before assuming coverage.
Is encapsulation as safe as removal?
Encapsulation can be effective for non-friable materials in good condition that will not be disturbed. However, the asbestos remains and must be monitored. In Beaumont's San Gorgonio Pass environment — where relentless wind, extreme thermal cycling, and seismic activity stress building materials year after year, and where renovation demand on aging homes means disturbance is likely — removal is often the safer long-term solution.
Get Asbestos Removal in Beaumont
Asbestos in your Beaumont property demands a professional response — not next month, not when the budget allows. The diseases are irreversible. The fibers are invisible. The latency spans decades. Every day that damaged ACMs remain, your family's exposure risk continues.
In a city born as a railroad stop in the San Gorgonio Pass — where the original downtown along 6th Street and Beaumont Avenue still contains structures from the early twentieth century, where mid-century homes along Pennsylvania Avenue and Highland Springs Avenue were built with the standard asbestos-containing materials of their era, where the explosive 2000s growth that created Sundance, Tournament Hills, Fairway Canyon, and Solera is now old enough to demand its first major renovations, where pass winds batter building materials year-round, where thermal cycling at 2,600 feet cracks and degrades materials faster than in lower-elevation communities, and where the San Gorgonio Pass thrust fault and San Jacinto Fault Zone add seismic stress to every aging structure — the risk is not theoretical. It is present in the ceilings, floors, walls, pipes, stucco, and ductwork of homes across ZIP code 92223.
Whether you have confirmed ACMs, suspect asbestos, or need testing before renovating anywhere in Beaumont — from a pre-1980 home near downtown to a 2000s-era property in Sundance or Tournament Hills — MoldRx only sends licensed, insured, and fully compliant abatement professionals. Your family's safety is not something to gamble on.
Call MoldRx for your free estimate — (888) 609-8907. Licensed. Compliant. Done right.


