This property has a documented history as a gasoline service station going back to 1925. Historical insurance policies issued during those prior operations and through 1986 could fund a cleanup — and recover costs already spent.
An automotive service station occupied this Tacoma property from the mid-1920s through the late 1970s, operating five underground storage tanks — four gasoline USTs and one waste oil UST — together with a pump island used for retail fuel dispensing. The USTs and dispenser island were closed in-place in 1977–1978, but petroleum contamination persisted; a soil vapor extraction and air sparging system operated at 1201 A Street from 1999 to 2004, recovering 36,100 pounds of gasoline-range hydrocarbons including 120 pounds of benzene. Remediation on the adjacent 1301 A Street parcel included excavation and disposal of 2,536 tons of petroleum-contaminated soil and a separate SVE/AS system that ran from April 2000 through November 2002, while product recovery from monitoring wells continued through 2009–2010. Cleanup remains ongoing under Ecology's Voluntary Cleanup Program. That history could support an insurance cost recovery claim against carriers who issued insurance policies 40+ years ago.
Why Historical Insurance Policies May Be Accessible
Pre-1986 Commercial General Liability (CGL) policies were occurrence-based and did not contain an effective pollution exclusion in Washington. If contamination occurred while those policies were active, those historical insurance carriers may still have a legal obligation to fund the cleanup costs, even if the business closed or the property changed hands.
The gasoline releases at this site trace to service station operations that began in the mid-1920s — more than six decades before 1986 — and the detection of lead, ethylene dibromide (EDB), and ethylene dichloride (EDC) in groundwater confirms the site's reliance on leaded gasoline formulations phased out well before the modern pollution-exclusion era. Occurrence-based Commercial General Liability policies issued to operators during that pre-1986 window carried no effective pollution exclusion under Washington law and remain potentially enforceable. The documented remediation expenditures — two SVE/AS systems, 2,536 tons of excavated soil, years of free-product recovery, and continuing VCP oversight — represent ongoing cleanup costs that historical carriers may be obligated both to recover and to fund going forward.
Restorical's role is to locate viable historical policies, determine whether a successful coverage claim is possible, and assist our clients and their legal counsel to obtain insurance coverage. Restorical then manages the claim, including accounting, to ensure the cleanup is funded in a timely manner.
What We Look For
- Historical insurance policies (pre-1986)
- Policy numbers, carrier names, and coverage periods
- Connection between contamination timing and policy period
- Evidence linking cleanup obligation to insured activity
What We Deliver
- Historical Coverage Chart
- Trigger Analysis & Property/Policy Nexus
- Coverage strategy with recommendations
- Insurance funding for your remediation
- Claims Management & Forensic Accounting
The Restorical Proven Process
Ready to learn more?
Contact UsThis analysis is preliminary and based on publicly available records. Restorical Research is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.


