InspectAPedia TM

Building & Environmental Inspection, Testing, Diagnosis, Repair, & Problem Prevention Advice
InspectAPedia
Home
| Air
Conditioning
| Electrical | Environment | Exteriors | Heating | Home
Inspection
| Insulate
Ventilate
| Interiors | Mold
Inspect/Test
| Plumbing
Water
Septic
| Roofing | Structure | Contact Us
New Directory of Professionals to Inspect or Test a Building New



Odors, Smells, Gases in Buildings-Diagnosis & Cure
ANIMAL ODORS IN BUILDINGS
CARBON MONOXIDE & GAS HEAT ODORS
CARPETS & PADDING ODORS IN BUILDINGS
GAS MEASUREMENT TOOLS
MOLD ODORS, Musty Smells in Buildings
OIL HEAT ODORS
OIL TANK LEAK ODORS
PAINTS & COATINGS ODORS IN BUILDINGS
SEWER GAS ODORS
SEWER GAS ODORS in COLD WEATHER
VINYL Siding or PLASTIC Window ODORS in Buildings
ODORS IN WATER
OZONE for MOLD OR ODORS

More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
InspectAPedia Bookstore
Electrical
Environment
Exteriors
Heating
Home Inspection
Insulate Ventilate
Interiors
Mold Inspect/Test
Plumbing Water Septic
Roofing
Structure
Accuracy & Bias Pledge
Contact Us




Photograph of - damaged vinyl siding

Guide to Plastic, Vinyl, Chemical Odor Source Diagnosis - Vinyl Siding & Plastic Window & other Indoor Odor Sources
ExteriorAPedia ©

Google
 
  • Guide to Diagnosing & Curing Sources of Chemical and Plastic Odors in Buildings
  • Does your home have "BO" - building odor?
  • Links to articles on diagnosing and curing smells in buildings
Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest. We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices, false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.

This article discusses common odor sources observed some installations of vinyl exterior building siding or in other plastic or vinyl building products such as windows and trim © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

Guide to Finding Plastic or Chemical Odors In Buildings

A variety of common building products, coatings, and furnishings may exude odors that disturb at least some occupants. Most of these occur in new building products and dissipate fairly rapidly. Other building odors or "house B.O." may be persistent or may be intermittent but unpleasant. Some of these odor sources in buildings can be tricky to track down. Here we list some common building products that may produce chemical or plastic like odors. We provide some suggestions for tracking down these odor sources in buildings, and we offer suggestions for removing or curing these odors.

Siding, window, screen, & other "plastic" odors: We've investigated a number of reports of strange odors in residential buildings that were ultimately traced to vinyl or plastic which was outgassing. We've observed this phenomenon with vinyl siding, plastic or vinyl window or door screens, and plastic or vinyl windows. A key diagnostic step was the observation that the odors were strongest when the material under investigation was exposed to sunlight or other sources of heat. [This article is under development, September 2007, and we welcome content suggestions or questions].

Some Common Plastic & Vinyl Building Products that May Emit Odors Include:

  • Vinyl siding in certain product batches by some manufacturers may exude a plastic odor, especially when new or when exposed to heat or sunlight.
  • Vinyl or plastic exterior trim in certain product batches by some manufacturers may exude a plastic odor, especially when new or when exposed to heat or sunlight.
  • Vinyl or plastic windows, such as plastic-clad or vinyl clad windows by some manufacturers may exude a "chemical"
    odor or smell, especially when new or when heated.
  • Window or door screens, plastic or vinyl, sometimes smell, especially when new or when heated.

Guide to Diagnosing Plastic or Chemical Smells in Buildings

We offer below a list of clues that any home owner, home inspector, or other investigator can follow in seeking to pinpoint the source of an annoying or obnoxious odor in buildings. Readers are asked to contact us to suggest additions or corrections to this list. Often people's perception of odors varies with time and exposure or with a number of other site factors that make it hard to track down just where a smell is coming from. But if we think carefully about when, and under what conditions we notice odors, often that information is instrumental in tracking down an odor to its source and thus in helping us decide if an odor refers to a potentially dangerous or unhealthy condition.

This list is in simple alphabetic order, not in order of probable cause, importance, or health risk, all of which can vary widely.

  • Odors & Appliances: does the odor appear only when certain appliances are running: cookstove, air conditioner, heater, aquarium pump, fans, clothes dryers, clothes washers, dishwashers, or eletrical devices such as TV's?

  • Odors & Building Structure: does the odor relate to presence of a nearby air movement pathway such as a building stairwell, elevator shaft, or heating and cooling duct system?

  • Odors & Fans: while exhaust fans are often used to move odors out of a building, a little thinking and investigating may be in order: does the exhaust fan or whole house fan or attic roof vent fan cause odors, dust, or even mold to move upwards through the building? (Be careful that your whole house fan or other exhaust fans do not overpower and cause improper operation of your radon mitigation system if you have one installed).

  • Odor history: when was the odor first noticed? What date? For how long has it been observed? Who first observed it? Does the first occurrence of a smell relate to an event, change, or modification in the building? If so, what exactly?

  • Odor location: does the odor appear throughout a building or only on certain floors, in certain rooms, or at certain walls?
    • What is different about the room where an odor appears:
      • What side of the building is the room on? What conditions are different there such as sun exposure, wind exposure, nearby trees, prevalent wind direction, outdoor possible odor sources?
      • What side of the room, what wall, has the strongest odor: is it an exterior or interior wall?
      • What materials are unique to the odor-source room, such as carpets, carpet padding, drapes, window shades, kind and type and age of windows, screens, heat, air conditioning, pet occupancy, people occupancy, laundry storage, proximity to baths, kitchens, laundry, openings between floors?
    • What is different about the floor or level in a building where odors occur? Proximity to basements, attics, leaks, rodents, pests, animals, heating equipment, pesticide treatments

      On request we can describe a procedure that assists in pinpointing odor sources to a particular surface or piece of furniture or carpeting, using aluminum foil, paper towels, and simple masking tape.

  • Odors & neighbors: does the odor correlate with activities by building occupants or building neighbors? What about trash burning, level of septic system usage, use of woodstoves, coal stoves, home improvements, building projects.

  • Odors & occupants: does the odor occur when the building is occupied by large number of people, visitors, or specific individuals who may have brought something new into the building?

  • Odor perceivers: who notices the smells? Is the odor perceived only by certain occupants? Is the odor more noticeable to building occupants or to occasional visitors. People's sensitivity to many odors tends to diminish over longer exposure times as the odor-sensing neurons and brain response become desensitized. Such individuals may notice an odor only upon entry to a building and not after being indoors for a time; people can also become desensitized to an odor such that even after leaving and returning to the building they do not notice the odor as much as is noticed by visitors. This seems especially true with animal and pet odors for people who live with pets.

  • Odors & Pets: what is the history of animals and pets occupying the building? What about prior owners and their pets. What about animal pests such as rodents: mice, squirrels, raccoons, insects, who may be responsible for smelly insulation, animal urine or fecal waste on building surfaces, dead animals in walls or ceilings. See Building Inspection & Test Procedures for Pet Allergens.

  • Odors & Plumbing: does the odor presence relate to the use or dis-use of plumbing fixtures in the building? Does heavy usage bring out the odor problem? Does the odor problem seem worse when the building has been unoccupied for some time? See SEWER GAS ODORS and SEWER GAS ODORS in COLD WEATHER for drain and septic system related odor diagnosis. See ODORS IN WATER for smells in drinking water or showers.

  • Odor strength: is the odor perceived as strong or mild?

  • Odors & time of occurrence: does the odor appear all of the time or only at certain times. For odors that come and go, does the time of the odor correlate with:
    • Time of day, sunlight, operation of heating or cooling equipment
    • Time of year, season, foliage, outdoor or indoor activities
    • Heating or cooling season: does the odor appear when the heating system comes on? Check immediately to assure that there are no carbon monoxide hazards or flue gas hazards. See CARBON MONOXIDE & GAS HEAT ODORS
    • Cooking activities may be an odor source

  • Odors & local temperature: does the odor appear or disappear in relation to changes in building temperature?
    • Sunlight striking plastic window screens may make a distinctive odor only on the sunlit side of the building
    • Plumbing system drains or vent systems may release odors when a private septic system is under heavy use or in certain weather conditions - see SEWER GAS ODORS in COLD WEATHER

  • Odors & weather conditions: does the odor correlate with weather conditions such as humidity, temperature, rain, snow, wind?

Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

Odors, Smells, Gases in Buildings-Diagnosis & Cure
ANIMAL ODORS IN BUILDINGS
CARBON MONOXIDE & GAS HEAT ODORS
CARPETS & PADDING ODORS IN BUILDINGS
GAS MEASUREMENT TOOLS
MOLD ODORS, Musty Smells in Buildings
OIL HEAT ODORS
OIL TANK LEAK ODORS
PAINTS & COATINGS ODORS IN BUILDINGS
SEWER GAS ODORS
SEWER GAS ODORS in COLD WEATHER
VINYL Siding or PLASTIC Window ODORS in Buildings
ODORS IN WATER
OZONE for MOLD OR ODORS

More expert information on this topic


Vinyl Siding Defects
Odors, Smells, Gases in Buildings-Diagnosis & Cure

MOLD ODORS, Musty Smells in Buildings
SEWER GAS ODORS
SEWER GAS ODORS in COLD WEATHER
VINYL Siding or PLASTIC Window ODORS in Buildings
ODORS IN WATER
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
InspectAPedia Bookstore
Electrical
Environment
Exteriors
Heating
Home Inspection
Insulate Ventilate
Interiors
Mold Inspect/Test
Plumbing Water Septic
Roofing
Structure
Accuracy & Bias Pledge
Contact Us

More Information on Building Diagnostic Inspections and Repairs

    ...

goto InspectAPedia.com - authoritative, in-depth Building Diagnostic and Repair Information for building buyers, owners, inspectorsInspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map - Building Inspection, Diagnosis, & Repair, Environmental Inspection & Testing - Research Website

GO TO the MOLD and INDOOR ENVIRONMENT INFORMATION CENTER for in-depth advice on avoiding testing for or cleaning up mold and other indoor environmental hazards, odors, gases, contaminantsThe Mold Information Center: What to Do About Mold in Buildings, When and How to Inspect for Mold, Clean Up Mold, or Avoid Mold Problems

GO TO our PRE PURCHASE BUILDING INSPECTION SERVICES: Authoritative information for home buyers and home owners is included with your inspection.Home Inspection Construction Consulting Services & advice for home buyers

GO TO MOLD TEST KITS: This expert-recommended mold test kit is cheap and yet top performing *IF* you use a competent analysis laboratory!Use this simple, economical mold test kit by following our instructions on how to collect and mail mold samples to our lab

GO TO IAQ/MOLD-TEST LAB SERVICES: Mold, Pollen, indoor air quality, field and laboratory services by an expert.Environmental Inspection, Testing, & Diagnosis On-Site IAQ, Gas, Air Testing, Mold Investigation, Sick Building Diagnosis, Lab Services, & Remediation Plan Preparation - indoor air quality testing, problem source determination, supporting lab work, written remediation plan addressing removal of environmental and other hazards and prevention of their recurrence.

CONTACT Daniel Friedman - Dan is a senior ASHI home inspector, nationally recognized expert on building inspection, building failures, and sick building investigationContact Daniel Friedman for website content suggestions or for fee-paid consulting

Google
 

05/12/2008 - 05/12/2008 www.inspect-ny.com/exterior/Plastic_Odors.htm - Web page design & content © 2008 - 2008 Daniel Friedman - All Rights Reserved