National inventory of asbestos in buildings
The National Asbestos Inventory lists all buildings owned or leased by Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) and buildings owned or leased by the Government of Canada which indicates whether or not they contain asbestos as of December 2022.
On this page
Consult the inventory in Public Services and Procurement Canada buildings
To find out whether there is a known presence of asbestos in a building owned or leased by PSPC, locate the building in the inventory below. You can search by entering key words in the "Filter items" box. You can also sort certain columns to locate a building by its Directory of Federal Real Property unique number, name, city, province or territory, postal code or by asset type (Crown-owned, Lease or Lease-purchase).
No. | DFRP No. | Asset name | Address | City | Province | Postal code | Asset type | Known presence of asbestos? | Asbestos management plan in place? |
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How Public Services and Procurement Canada manages asbestos in its buildings
The Government of Canada carefully manages the risks associated with asbestos in its buildings. All buildings owned or leased by PSPC that contain asbestos are required to have an asbestos management plan. If asbestos has recently been discovered, an asbestos management plan may not yet be in place. PSPC is working diligently with landlords to ensure that asbestos management plans are developed for the few leased buildings that do not yet have them.
To learn more about how PSPC manages asbestos in its buildings, consult the page Asbestos in Public Services and Procurement Canada buildings.
Federal buildings
Inquiries about properties owned or managed by other government departments should be addressed to the respective departments.
- Information on leased buildings was obtained from the landlords for each building
- landlords are responsible for information on leased buildings
- Buildings that are part of a campus or grouping of buildings are listed under their individual building names and individual addresses, not the campus name
- for example, you can find the Jeanne-Mance Building in the inventory, but not the Tunney's Pasture campus
- Where there is no known asbestos in a building, an asbestos management plan is not required
To find out whether there is a known presence of asbestos in a building owned or leased by the Government of Canada, select an organization below.
List of services and programs starting with the letter A
List of services and programs starting with the letter C
List of services and programs starting with the letter E
List of services and programs starting with the letter F
List of services and programs starting with the letter G
List of services and programs starting with the letter H
List of services and programs starting with the letter I
List of services and programs starting with the letter L
List of services and programs starting with the letter N
List of services and programs starting with the letter P
List of services and programs starting with the letter R
List of services and programs starting with the letter T
List of services and programs starting with the letter V
Related links
- Asbestos Management Directive
- Asbestos Management Standard
- Asbestos in Public Services and Procurement Canada buildings
- Government of Canada taking next steps in banning asbestos to protect workers’ health and safety: New release (July 12, 2017)
- Fact sheet on asbestos (Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety)
- Health risks of asbestos
- Canada Labour Code, Part II—Occupational Health and Safety Regulations
- Occupational Health and Safety Directive, Part XI—Hazardous Substances (National Joint Council)
From: Public Services and Procurement Canada
- Date modified: