Lead-safe painting matters most in older Ottawa and Gatineau homes. Houses built before 1978 can contain lead-based paint, and disturbing it during sanding or scraping releases lead dust that is genuinely hazardous, especially to children. Lead-safe work means proper containment, careful surface handling, and thorough clean-up so a repaint does not put your family at risk.

What is included

Containment

We seal off the work area so dust from old surfaces does not spread through your home.

Careful surface handling

Methods that minimize dust when disturbing older painted surfaces, rather than aggressive dry sanding.

Thorough clean-up

Specialized clean-up so fine dust does not linger after the job is finished.

Honest guidance

If we are unsure whether a surface contains lead, we tell you and recommend testing rather than guessing.

Our process

  1. Identify the risk

    We assess the age of the home and the surfaces involved and discuss whether lead is a concern.

  2. Contain the area

    We seal the work zone and protect the rest of your home before disturbing any old paint.

  3. Work safely

    We use lead-safe methods that keep dust down while we prep and paint.

  4. Clean and verify

    Careful clean-up so no hazardous dust is left behind, then a walkthrough with you.

Why this matters in Ottawa

Ottawa and Gatineau have a large stock of character homes built well before 1978, many in established neighbourhoods like the Glebe, Westboro, and the older core. That charm often comes with old paint layers. Lead-safe practices let you refresh these homes without exposing your household to lead dust.

What it costs

Lead-safe work involves extra containment and clean-up, which can affect the scope of a project on an older home. We explain what is involved and give you a clear written estimate so you understand exactly what the lead-safe steps add and why they matter. Request your free estimate to discuss your home.

Lead-Safe Painting: common questions

Age is the main clue: homes built before 1978 may contain lead-based paint, often under newer layers. The only way to be certain is testing, so if there is any doubt on a surface we plan to disturb, we will tell you honestly and recommend a test rather than guess. Knowing for sure is the safe starting point for any work on an older home.

Lead is a toxic metal, and the fine dust created when old lead paint is sanded or scraped is the main exposure risk during renovation, especially for young children and pregnant women. That is exactly why lead-safe work centres on containing dust and cleaning thoroughly, so a repaint improves your home without creating a hidden health hazard.

It means sealing off the work area so dust does not spread, using methods that minimize dust when disturbing old surfaces instead of aggressive dry sanding, and doing a thorough specialized clean-up afterward. The point is to keep the lead dust contained to the work zone and then removed, rather than spread through your living space.

It can affect the scope, because the extra containment and clean-up take time and care. We are upfront about what the lead-safe steps add to a project on an older home and why they are worth it. Your written estimate spells this out clearly, so you are deciding with full information rather than discovering costs partway through.

Not every surface in every pre-1978 home contains lead, but the risk is real enough that it has to be taken seriously whenever older paint will be disturbed. We assess the specific surfaces involved in your project, and where lead is a genuine concern we apply lead-safe practices. Where it is not, we will tell you that too.

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