Georgia-Pacific drywall texture — Georgia-Pacific

Product Description

Georgia-Pacific drywall texture were manufactured under the Georgia-Pacific name and supplied throughout the period when asbestos was the routine sealing and insulating material in drywall texture service. The Georgia-Pacific catalog reached American industrial worksites, including power generation facilities, refineries, paper mills, shipyards, and major institutional construction projects.

According to asbestos litigation records, Georgia-Pacific drywall texture were supplied to American industry through the period when asbestos was treated as the routine sealing and insulating material for high-temperature service. Georgia-Pacific built its market position around durability and reliability under demanding conditions — the same operating envelope that drove asbestos use across the drywall texture category well into the late 1970s.


Asbestos Content

Court filings document allegations that Georgia-Pacific drywall texture incorporated asbestos in one or more of the structural roles common to drywall texture of the era:

Asbestos fiber filler — Texture paints, spray-applied texture finishes, and acoustic ‘popcorn’ ceiling products incorporated chrysotile asbestos as a body-bulking and dimensional-stability additive throughout the period before regulatory action.

Spray application — Workers applying texture by spray gun generated overspray and airborne fiber that concentrated in the breathing zone of the applicator and surrounding trades.

Finishing and rework — Sanding, scraping, or patching texture-finished surfaces during finish work and later renovation reactivated airborne asbestos fibers.

Take-home pathway — Texture work generated heavy dust loads on clothing, hair, and tools, contributing to take-home exposure of household members.

The asbestos in these components was not unique to Georgia-Pacific; the materials in question were industry-standard well into the 1970s. The relevance to litigation lies in the volume of Georgia-Pacific drywall texture installed across American worksites and the frequency with which those components were disturbed during ordinary maintenance.


How Workers Were Exposed

Workers most likely to have encountered asbestos through Georgia-Pacific drywall texture include those whose trades brought them into routine contact with the equipment:

  • Drywall texture applicators — spraying or troweling texture finishes on residential ceilings and walls
  • Painters and prep crews — sanding and finishing texture-finished surfaces
  • General construction laborers — cleaning overspray and texture debris
  • Renovation and demolition workers — removing or patching texture finishes during remodel work

Court filings document that bystander and take-home pathways were also common. Workers who did not directly handle Georgia-Pacific drywall texture but who shared confined work areas with those who did were alleged to have inhaled the same airborne fibers. Family members were exposed through fibers carried home on contaminated work clothing — a pathway recognized in occupational medicine and asbestos litigation as take-home or secondary exposure.

The latency period for asbestos-related diseases — mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, and pleural disease — ranges from roughly ten to fifty years between initial exposure and diagnosis. Workers exposed through Georgia-Pacific drywall texture during the 1940s through the early 1980s may only now be receiving diagnoses tied to that occupational history.


The current trust-fund and litigation status for products in the Georgia-Pacific catalog is summarized on the manufacturer reference page linked at the top of this article. Where a Section 524(g) trust exists, claims may be filed in parallel with civil litigation against other defendants whose products contributed to the same exposure history. Where no trust exists, claims are pursued through the civil court system. Statute-of-limitations rules vary by state and disease type; the limitations clock generally begins at the time of diagnosis rather than the time of exposure.

Individuals who worked with or around Georgia-Pacific drywall texture and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should preserve documentation of employment history, jobsites, and product identification, and consult an attorney experienced in asbestos claims promptly after diagnosis.


Documented Product Identification

The following details are drawn from public asbestos litigation records, manufacturer catalog pages, technical manuals, and corporate history materials. Each item reflects the product as documented in those sources.

Documented asbestos-use period: 1956-1978

Corporate context: Originally incorporated in 1927 as Georgia Hardwood Lumber Co., the company underwent several name changes before becoming Georgia-Pacific Corporation in 1952. Georgia-Pacific acquired Bestwall Gypsum Company in 1965, which had manufactured asbestos-containing products since 1956, and created its Gypsum Division to continue that product line.

Brand identification: Products sold under Bestwall name prior to 1965 acquisition; Georgia-Pacific Gypsum Division branding thereafter; also manufactured joint compound for Johns Manville, Flintkote, Grand Rapids Gypsum Company, and Big Horn Gypsum under their respective brand names

Documented asbestos components: joint compound, ready mix compound, acoustical spray, plaster, adhesive, texture, spackling compound, patching plaster, topping compound.

Documented asbestos-component suppliers: the public records lists the following external suppliers of asbestos-bearing packing, gaskets, and seals used in conjunction with this manufacturer’s equipment — Philip Carey, Union Carbide.

Industries served: construction, residential building, commercial building, drywall installation.

Documented product lines:

  • Joint Compound (1956-1977). Product designed to conceal and reinforce joints between sheets of gypsum wallboard to provide a smooth monolithic surface — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 2.5-6.0%.
  • Ready Mix (1963-1977). Pre-mixed joint compound designed to conceal and reinforce joints between sheets of gypsum wallboard — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 1.5-12.0%.
  • Lite Acoustic (1958-1964). Ceiling finishing material with noise reduction properties, spray or trowel applied — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 25-29.09%.
  • Kalite (1956-1959). Ceiling finishing material with noise reduction properties — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 2.6%.
  • Textures (Bestex A, B, C, D, Certex Texture, Wall Texture, Ceiling Texture) (1956-1974). Decorative finish for walls and ceilings applied by spray, roller, brush or hand tool — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 2.0-22.5%.
  • Patching Plaster (1956-1975). Product designed to fill small holes and cracks in wallboard — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 2.0%.
  • Spackling Compound (1956-1971). Product designed to fill small holes and cracks in wallboard — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 5.5%.
  • Speed Set (1962-onward). Fast-setting joint compound to conceal and reinforce joints between gypsum wallboard sheets — asbestos components: chrysotile asbestos 2.75-6.75%.

Georgia-Pacific manufactured asbestos-containing joint compounds for other companies including Johns Manville (1956-1962/63), Flintkote, Grand Rapids Gypsum Company (1956-1965), and Big Horn Gypsum (late 1960s) which were sold under those companies’ names. Products were manufactured at 10 plants nationwide and distributed through 80-140 company distribution centers.