OVERVIEW
After mold remediation, the affected area is clean. The contaminated material has been removed, surfaces have been HEPA vacuumed, and clearance testing has confirmed acceptable spore levels. What the remediation does not change is the underlying nature of the surface. Untreated wood framing, concrete block, and gypsum board are all porous, organic, or mineral-based materials that will support microbial colonization again if moisture returns — because the surface chemistry that made them hospitable the first time has not changed.
Specialty antimicrobial coatings address this at the molecular level. Applied to treated structural surfaces following remediation, these EPA-registered products bond to the substrate and create an inhospitable surface environment for microbial growth. They do not degrade, wash off, or lose efficacy over time the way surface sprays do. They become part of the surface — providing protection that persists through the normal life of the building component they are applied to.
In Florida's climate, where humidity, heat, and frequent moisture events create near-constant pressure on building materials, specialty coatings are the difference between a remediation that holds long-term and one that needs to be repeated.
WHAT MAKES SPECIALTY COATING DIFFERENT FROM ANTIMICROBIAL SPRAYS
Consumer antimicrobial sprays and basic mold inhibitors applied during remediation are contact treatments — they kill or inhibit surface growth at the moment of application but provide no durable protection. Specialty coatings used in professional remediation are quaternary ammonium silane compounds or similar formulations that form a covalent bond with the substrate. The protective mechanism is physical, not chemical — microbial cells cannot attach to and colonize the treated surface regardless of moisture conditions.
Expected protection lifespan of properly applied specialty coatings on structural wood surfaces
Registered products — every coating meets EPA standards for antimicrobial efficacy and occupant safety
Of applications include surface preparation verification before coating is applied
WHAT THESE COATINGS ACTUALLY ARE
HOW SPECIALTY COATINGS WORK – AND WHY IT MATTERS
WHERE COATINGS ARE APPLIED
OUR PROCESS
CLIENT REVIEWS
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
SERVICE AREA
EXPLORE MORE
Specialty coatings are applied after remediation is complete — not instead of it. If active mold contamination is present, remediation is the required first step before any protective coating can be applied.
Attic insulation removal exposes structural framing and sheathing that are prime candidates for specialty coating — especially in Florida attics where heat and humidity create sustained microbial pressure on wood surfaces.
Air sealing and specialty coatings applied in the same mobilization provide complementary protection — sealing the moisture entry pathway while coating the structural surfaces against future microbial establishment.
If your project requires specialty coatings but no formal scope has been written, FPT can develop the documented protocol specifying surfaces, products, preparation standards, and verification requirements.