Premises Description

Lone Star Cement Corporation (later Lone Star Industries, Inc. — founded 1919, headquartered Greenwich CT; acquired by Buzzi Unicem 2004) was through the 20th century one of the principal U.S. portland cement manufacturers, operating cement plants and aggregate operations across the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Midwest, and Texas through the asbestos era.

Cement manufacturing is among the most asbestos-intensive heavy-industry processes documented in U.S. occupational asbestos litigation. Portland cement kilns operate continuously at temperatures around 1450°C and were specified with extensive asbestos refractory, asbestos kiln-shell insulation, asbestos pipe covering on preheater-tower process piping, and asbestos electrical insulation on motor and switchgear systems through the documented era. Lone Star and the other principal U.S. cement majors (Lehigh, Lafarge, Holnam/Holcim, Martin Marietta) faced extensive premises-liability exposure across the industry.

Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that Lone Star Cement / Lone Star Industries — as premises owner of its U.S. cement manufacturing plants — exposed its cement-plant workforce and contractor pipefitters, insulators, boilermakers, and trade workers to extensive asbestos materials.

Lone Star Cement / Lone Star Industries has been named as a Premises Defendant in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation.

Workers Exposed

  • Cement-plant operators and maintenance workers
  • Refinery pipefitters and millwrights working cement-plant capital projects and turnarounds
  • Insulators (HFIAW Local members) insulating Lone Star kilns, preheater towers, and process piping
  • Boilermakers (IBB Local members) building and repairing Lone Star kiln shells and pressure vessels
  • Electricians (IBEW Local members) working Lone Star plant electrical systems
  • Construction-trade workforces on Lone Star cement-plant capital projects

If You Worked at a Lone Star Cement Plant

If you worked at a Lone Star Cement / Lone Star Industries portland cement manufacturing plant during the asbestos era — as a Lone Star employee or as a dispatched contractor trade worker — and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or another asbestos-related illness, you may have legal rights.

Free, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O’Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956