Cafco Spray (1954–1958)

Product Description

Cafco Spray was a spray-applied fireproofing material manufactured by U.S. Mineral Products Company during the mid-1950s. Sold under the Cafco brand name — a product line that U.S. Mineral Products developed into one of the more widely recognized families of spray fireproofing materials in American commercial and industrial construction — this early formulation was produced between approximately 1954 and 1958.

Spray-applied fireproofing materials of this era were engineered to protect structural steel elements from heat damage in the event of fire. Building codes and insurance standards increasingly required that steel columns, beams, and decking in industrial and commercial structures be coated with insulating materials capable of maintaining structural integrity at elevated temperatures. Spray application offered a faster, more economical alternative to traditional encasement methods, making products like Cafco Spray attractive to contractors working on factories, warehouses, power plants, and other large-scale industrial facilities constructed during the postwar building expansion of the 1950s.

U.S. Mineral Products Company was headquartered in Stanhope, New Jersey, and became a significant participant in the spray fireproofing market throughout the mid-twentieth century. The Cafco brand name persisted across multiple product generations and reformulations, but the 1954–1958 version of Cafco Spray represents one of the earliest documented formulations associated with asbestos-related litigation and legal claims.

Asbestos Content

Spray fireproofing products manufactured during the 1950s routinely incorporated asbestos fibers as a primary functional ingredient. Asbestos offered thermal resistance, fiber cohesion, and insulating properties that made it well-suited for the technical demands of fireproofing applications. During the years Cafco Spray was produced, chrysotile asbestos — and in some formulations, amphibole varieties — was a standard component of spray-applied fireproofing mixtures across the industry.

Litigation records document that Cafco Spray, as manufactured during the 1954–1958 production period, contained asbestos as a constituent material. Plaintiffs alleged that asbestos fibers were present in sufficient concentrations to pose an inhalation hazard during both the application of the product and subsequent disturbance of installed material. Documentation produced in litigation has identified Cafco Spray as an asbestos-containing product within the broader context of claims against U.S. Mineral Products Company and related successor and insurance entities.

The specific fiber type and percentage composition of Cafco Spray has been addressed in litigation discovery and product identification proceedings. Because asbestos content in spray fireproofing was not uniformly disclosed to end users or applicator trades during this period, workers who handled or applied the product often did so without knowledge of the asbestos hazard present in the material.

How Workers Were Exposed

Industrial workers represent the trade category most directly associated with documented exposure to Cafco Spray during its production years. Exposure pathways were characteristic of spray-applied asbestos fireproofing materials generally and followed patterns well-established in occupational health and litigation records.

Application workers and spray operators faced the most direct and concentrated exposure. The spray application process involved mixing the dry product with water and projecting the resulting slurry onto structural steel surfaces using pressurized equipment. This process generated airborne asbestos dust and fiber at the point of discharge and throughout the immediate work area. Workers operating spray equipment, handling dry product bags, and working in the vicinity of active spray operations would have inhaled airborne fibers during normal work activities.

Workers in proximity to application — including ironworkers, pipefitters, electricians, and other trades performing concurrent work in the same industrial spaces — were also subject to secondary or bystander exposure. Spray fireproofing operations in large industrial buildings frequently occurred alongside other construction activities, and asbestos fibers released during application could remain airborne or settle on surfaces throughout a work area.

Maintenance and renovation workers encountered Cafco Spray in a different but equally documented exposure context. Installed spray fireproofing that had aged, been physically damaged, or was being removed or disturbed during renovation work could release asbestos fibers into the air. Workers cutting, scraping, or demolishing structural assemblies coated with Cafco Spray were at risk of significant fiber release from friable installed material.

Litigation records document that U.S. Mineral Products Company did not provide adequate warnings to workers regarding the asbestos content of Cafco Spray or the inhalation hazards associated with its use during the 1954–1958 production period. Plaintiffs alleged that the absence of hazard communication and protective guidance contributed directly to occupational asbestos exposures experienced by workers in industrial settings where the product was applied.

The diseases associated with occupational asbestos exposure from spray fireproofing products include mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, and other asbestos-related conditions. These diseases typically have latency periods of 20 to 50 years, meaning workers exposed to Cafco Spray during the 1950s may not have received diagnoses until decades later.