Fire Damage Restoration Glossary of Terms
Fire damage restoration involves a dense technical vocabulary drawn from structural engineering, industrial hygiene, insurance adjustment, and environmental science. This glossary defines the core terms used across the restoration industry, covering the language professionals apply during assessment, mitigation, remediation, and reconstruction. Accurate terminology matters because misclassification of damage types, smoke categories, or material conditions directly affects scope-of-work decisions, insurance settlements, and regulatory compliance.
Definition and scope
A restoration glossary in this context is a structured reference document that fixes the meaning of specialized terms as used within the fire and smoke damage remediation field. The authoritative baseline for much of this vocabulary comes from the Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC), whose standard IICRC S700 (Standard for Professional Fire and Smoke Damage Restoration) defines procedural and classification terminology adopted by contractors, adjusters, and courts. Additional definitional authority comes from NFPA 921: Guide for Fire and Explosion Investigations for cause-and-origin language, and from the EPA's indoor air quality guidance for combustion byproduct terminology.
The scope of the glossary spans three operational phases recognized in industry practice:
- Emergency response phase — terms governing immediate stabilization (board-up, tarping, water extraction from firefighting suppression)
- Assessment and planning phase — terms covering damage classification, salvageability determinations, and scope documentation
- Remediation and reconstruction phase — terms describing cleaning methods, air treatment technologies, structural repair categories, and clearance testing
How it works
Restoration terminology functions as a shared classification system. When a contractor, adjuster, industrial hygienist, and insurer examine the same loss, consistent definitions allow each party to interpret scope-of-work documents, moisture readings, and air quality reports without ambiguity. The fire damage restoration process overview illustrates how these terms sequence across project phases.
Key term clusters and their definitions:
- Char — The carbonized layer produced when organic material burns. Char depth is measured in millimeters and used to estimate fire duration and intensity at a given surface.
- Soot — Fine carbon particles and condensed hydrocarbons deposited by incomplete combustion. Soot composition varies by fuel source; protein fires, petroleum fires, and synthetic polymer fires each produce chemically distinct soot types. See smoke category types in restoration for full classification.
- Smoke category (dry, wet, protein, fuel oil) — The IICRC S700 framework categorizes smoke residues by physical and chemical properties. Dry smoke is powdery and low-smear; wet smoke is sticky and high-smear; protein smoke is nearly invisible but leaves a strong odor; fuel oil soot produces thick black residue.
- Pyrolysis — The thermal decomposition of materials in the absence of sufficient oxygen. Pyrolysis byproducts are chemically distinct from full combustion products and require different cleaning agents.
- Primary damage — Direct fire-contact destruction of materials.
- Secondary damage — Deterioration caused by soot, smoke, heat-affected moisture, or firefighting water after the fire event.
- Deposition zone — The area where smoke residues settle due to convection patterns during the fire. Identifying deposition zones is central to smoke damage assessment and restoration.
- Psychrometric conditions — Temperature, relative humidity, and dew point measurements used to calculate evaporation rates during structural drying after water damage from firefighting.
- Non-salvageable material — Material for which the cost or feasibility of restoration exceeds replacement value, or where contamination cannot be reduced to acceptable levels. Contrasted with salvageable material in salvageable vs non-salvageable materials.
- Clearance testing — Air sampling or surface wipe testing conducted by a third-party industrial hygienist to confirm that particulate and chemical levels have returned to pre-loss conditions. Post-fire air quality testing covers this process in detail.
- Thermal fogging — A deodorization technique using heat to vaporize solvent-based deodorizers that penetrate porous surfaces. Distinct from ozone treatment, which uses oxidation rather than chemical penetration. See thermal fogging and ozone treatment.
- Contents pack-out — The documented removal of personal property from a fire-affected structure for off-site cleaning, deodorization, or storage. Governed by fire damage content restoration procedures.
Common scenarios
Glossary terms intersect with specific loss scenarios in predictable ways. A kitchen grease fire produces protein smoke and wet smoke residues, requiring different cleaning agents than the dry smoke from a paper or wood fire. An electrical fire — covered in electrical fire damage restoration — may involve both pyrolysis products and arc-flash char patterns that affect cause-and-origin documentation under NFPA 921.
Wildfire losses, addressed in wildfire damage restoration, introduce the additional terminology of ash composition testing (critical because wildfire ash may contain heavy metals or combusted pesticide residues) and defensible space assessment vocabulary from Cal Fire guidance.
In structures built before 1980, restoration assessors must apply asbestos and lead terminology — regulated under EPA NESHAP 40 CFR Part 61, Subpart M for asbestos and HUD guidelines for lead — because fire and demolition activities can disturb these materials and trigger mandatory abatement protocols.
Decision boundaries
Terminology classification directly drives scope and cost decisions. The contrast between structural repair and structural rebuild — explored fully in fire damage restoration vs rebuild — determines whether a contractor files a repair estimate or a replacement estimate, a distinction with significant insurance implications.
The IICRC S700 establishes that a material classified as non-salvageable cannot be remediated and documented as restored; that boundary is non-negotiable in professional practice. Smoke category misclassification — for example, treating wet smoke as dry smoke — will result in inadequate cleaning, continued odor, and claim disputes.
Regulatory decision points include:
- Asbestos trigger threshold — Renovation or demolition of more than 160 square feet of regulated asbestos-containing material requires NESHAP notification to the EPA before work begins.
- OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1200 (Hazard Communication) — Applies when workers encounter combustion byproducts classified as hazardous substances (OSHA Hazard Communication Standard).
- Clearance criteria — Industrial hygienists apply EPA or locally adopted action levels for particulate matter and volatile organic compounds to issue clearance; no single national threshold exists for all fire residue types, making the hygienist's documented methodology central to defensibility.
- Insurance policy language — Terms like "direct physical loss," "smoke damage," and "resulting damage" are interpreted against the restoration industry's definitions; documenting fire damage for insurance covers how scope documents must align with policy language.
References
- IICRC S700: Standard for Professional Fire and Smoke Damage Restoration — Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification
- NFPA 921: Guide for Fire and Explosion Investigations — National Fire Protection Association
- EPA Indoor Air Quality — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- EPA NESHAP 40 CFR Part 61, Subpart M (Asbestos) — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency via eCFR
- OSHA Hazard Communication Standard (29 CFR 1910.1200) — Occupational Safety and Health Administration
- HUD Lead-Safe Housing Guidelines — U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Cal Fire Defensible Space Program — California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection