LURAN IMPERIAL Sheet Vinyl Flooring
Product Description
LURAN IMPERIAL was a sheet vinyl flooring product associated with G-I Holdings, a corporation that operated as a successor entity to GAF Corporation, one of the largest building materials manufacturers in the United States during the twentieth century. Sheet vinyl flooring of this type was designed for installation in residential, commercial, and industrial settings, offering a durable, moisture-resistant surface that became widely used across American construction during the mid-to-late twentieth century.
G-I Holdings came into existence as part of a corporate reorganization of GAF Corporation, and litigation records document that the company inherited significant asbestos-related liability tied to a broad range of building products manufactured and distributed under the GAF umbrella. LURAN IMPERIAL, as a sheet vinyl flooring product connected to this corporate lineage, has appeared in asbestos exposure litigation in the context of that inherited liability and the broader history of asbestos use in resilient flooring materials.
Sheet vinyl flooring products of this era were commonly manufactured using backing layers, adhesives, and felt underlayment materials that could incorporate chrysotile asbestos fibers as a reinforcing and stabilizing agent. The use of asbestos in resilient flooring products was widespread throughout the American flooring industry during the period when these products were produced, and regulatory attention to asbestos in floor coverings increased substantially following the development of the Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act (AHERA) framework and related EPA guidance documents addressing resilient flooring materials.
Asbestos Content
Plaintiffs in asbestos litigation have alleged that sheet vinyl flooring products associated with GAF Corporation and its successor entities, including G-I Holdings, contained asbestos fibers incorporated into product components such as the felt backing layer, the vinyl composite body, and the adhesive compounds recommended or supplied for installation. Chrysotile asbestos was the fiber type most commonly used in resilient flooring manufacturing during the relevant production periods.
Litigation records document that asbestos-containing resilient flooring products were a significant source of chrysotile exposure for workers involved in their installation, removal, and renovation. The asbestos content in sheet vinyl flooring was typically present in the backing and felt layers rather than the surface wear layer, meaning that the fibers were encapsulated during undisturbed use but could become friable and airborne during cutting, trimming, sanding, scraping, or demolition activities.
The EPA has published guidance recognizing that asbestos-containing resilient floor coverings, when disturbed through sanding or aggressive removal techniques, can release asbestos fibers into the ambient air at concentrations that present a health hazard. This guidance has been cited in litigation involving sheet vinyl flooring products from this period of manufacture.
How Workers Were Exposed
Litigation records document that workers across multiple trades and industrial settings encountered LURAN IMPERIAL and similar sheet vinyl flooring products in circumstances that created potential for asbestos fiber release and inhalation. The occupational categories most frequently identified in asbestos flooring litigation include flooring installers, flooring mechanics, tile and resilient flooring workers, general construction laborers, and renovation and demolition contractors.
Industrial workers generally represent a significant exposure population in litigation involving sheet vinyl flooring. Factories, manufacturing plants, warehouses, and other industrial facilities commonly installed sheet vinyl flooring products during the mid-twentieth century, and the routine maintenance, repair, and eventual removal of these floor coverings brought maintenance crews and general industrial workers into direct contact with asbestos-containing materials.
Plaintiffs alleged that exposure occurred through several primary mechanisms. First, during initial installation, workers cut sheet vinyl to fit floor dimensions using knives, shears, or saws, generating dust from the cut edges of asbestos-containing backing layers. Second, the application of adhesive compounds, which may themselves have contained asbestos in some formulations, required workers to spread material across large floor surfaces in enclosed spaces with limited ventilation. Third, and most significantly from an exposure standpoint, the removal of old or damaged sheet vinyl flooring required scraping, grinding, or sanding to separate the adhered backing from the subfloor, operations that plaintiffs alleged released substantial quantities of asbestos fibers into the breathing zones of workers performing the task.
Renovation and demolition work in industrial settings exposed workers who may not have identified themselves as flooring specialists but who disturbed flooring materials incidentally in the course of broader construction or demolition activities. Litigation records document that bystander exposure in these settings was a recognized pathway, as asbestos-containing dust generated by flooring removal could migrate through work areas and affect other trades working in proximity.
The latency period for asbestos-related disease means that workers exposed to LURAN IMPERIAL and similar products during the peak decades of installation and renovation may only now be experiencing diagnoses of mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or other asbestos-related conditions.