Structural Drying as Part of Mold Restoration

Structural drying is a foundational phase of mold restoration that addresses the moisture conditions enabling fungal growth in building materials. This page covers the technical definition of structural drying, the mechanisms by which it removes bound and unbound moisture from assemblies, the scenarios in which it is required, and the thresholds that determine when drying is sufficient versus when demolition or material replacement becomes necessary. Understanding this process is critical to evaluating whether a restoration scope is complete, since mold will recur on any substrate that retains elevated moisture content.

Definition and scope

Structural drying in the context of mold restoration refers to the controlled removal of moisture from building materials — including concrete, wood framing, drywall, subfloor assemblies, and masonry — to levels that inhibit mold colonization. The Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC S500 Standard for Professional Water Damage Restoration) and the IICRC S520 Standard for Professional Mold Remediation together establish the technical framework governing this work. S520, in particular, identifies moisture elimination as a prerequisite for any mold remediation to be considered complete.

The scope of structural drying extends beyond surface evaporation. Moisture exists in building materials in two states: free water occupying pore spaces, and bound water chemically or physically integrated into material matrices. Effective structural drying must address both. The EPA's guidance on mold remediation in schools and commercial buildings identifies moisture control as the single most important factor in preventing mold recurrence — a framing that positions structural drying as a prerequisite, not an ancillary step. Restoration contractors working on mold-affected properties should reference mold-restoration-certifications-and-standards for the credentialing standards that govern this work.

How it works

Structural drying operates through three interrelated physical processes: evaporation (conversion of liquid water to vapor at the material surface), dehumidification (removal of water vapor from the air inside the drying zone), and air movement (increasing the rate of vapor transport away from wet surfaces).

The process unfolds in discrete phases:

  1. Assessment and moisture mapping — Technicians use pin-type and pinless moisture meters, as well as thermal imaging cameras, to establish baseline moisture readings across affected assemblies. IICRC S500 specifies target moisture content levels by material class; wood framing, for instance, should reach equilibrium moisture content (EMC) appropriate to local ambient conditions, typically below 19 percent by mass to prevent structural fungi from activating.
  2. Containment and air exchange control — The drying zone is isolated to prevent re-introduction of humid air from unaffected building areas. This often integrates with the negative-pressure containment used for mold remediation (see containment-procedures-in-mold-restoration).
  3. Desiccant or refrigerant dehumidification — Refrigerant dehumidifiers are effective above 65°F and pull moisture from air through condensation on cooling coils. Desiccant dehumidifiers use silica gel or lithium chloride rotors and perform effectively at lower temperatures, making them the preferred unit for cold-weather drying or attic environments.
  4. High-velocity air movement — Axial and centrifugal air movers accelerate surface evaporation. Placement follows a calculated pattern — typically one air mover per 50 to 100 square feet of wet surface area, adjusted by material porosity and depth of saturation.
  5. Daily monitoring and adjustment — Moisture readings are documented at fixed intervals, and equipment is repositioned or supplemented based on drying rate curves. IICRC S500 categorizes drying progress using psychrometric calculations that account for temperature, relative humidity, and specific humidity of the air exiting the drying zone.

Refrigerant versus desiccant dehumidification represents the principal equipment decision. Refrigerant units are lower in energy cost under standard conditions but lose efficiency below 60°F and cannot achieve the low dew points required for structural assemblies with deeply embedded moisture. Desiccant units achieve dew points as low as −40°F and are preferred for dense-pack materials such as concrete block or thick timber.

Common scenarios

Structural drying becomes a required element of mold restoration in several identifiable situations:

Decision boundaries

Not all moisture-affected materials can or should be dried in place. The IICRC S520 framework and the EPA mold remediation guidance both establish conditions under which material removal supersedes drying:

OSHA's General Industry Standard 29 CFR 1910.132 and the Construction Standard 29 CFR 1926.28 govern personal protective equipment requirements for workers operating in mold-contaminated drying environments (OSHA Standards). These standards define the minimum respiratory and dermal protection applicable when drying disturbs mold-colonized materials. The full restoration process — of which structural drying is one phase — is detailed within the mold-damage-restoration-process framework.

References