Commercial Radon Mitigation in Covington
Commercial buildings (particularly schools, daycares, and senior living) face stricter monitoring requirements. Our Cincinnati mitigators design multi-zone mitigation systems with continuous radon monitors and quarterly testing programs. Covington sits within our service area for Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, with same-week scheduling typical for routine jobs.
Typical pricing in Covington
Quote-based
Pricing varies by job specifics. Free phone or on-site quotes; fixed pricing after our technician has assessed the job.
Commercial Radon Mitigation in Covington: pre-war urban Kenton County foundations and Cincinnati Arch geology
Commercial Radon Mitigation in Covington involves multi-point sub-slab depressurization sized for the building footprint with redundant fans and continuous monitoring, working on the slab-to-soil interface across the commercial footprint, often with multiple suction points. The service is required for schools, multi-family housing, and any commercial building where occupants spend extended time on the lowest level.
Covington's residential core is 1850s-1920s row housing, single-family, and the historic MainStrasse district. Plaster walls, stone or early-brick foundations, and the dense urban grid character of the largest NKY river city. River-corridor and Licking-River-confluence proximity drives the moisture profile. Covington sits on the Cincinnati Arch geology (fractured Ordovician limestone and shale) that drives elevated regional radon exposure across the entire Greater Cincinnati metro, including Kenton County.
ANSI/AARST CC-1000 governs large-building mitigation. School buildings follow ANSI/AARST RMS-LB and SGM-SF for measurement and mitigation respectively. The Kentucky Radon Program (Cabinet for Health and Family Services) oversees radon program compliance for Covington, and the Kentucky Radon Program requires NRPP or NRSB certification for residential mitigation work.
- County
- Kenton, KY
- Geology
- Cincinnati Arch (Ordovician limestone and shale)
- EPA action level
- 4.0 pCi/L on long-term average
- Service category
- Mitigation