Industrial & Manufacturing cleanup site — Restorical Research
Asahipen America Inc
1128 SW Spokane St, Seattle, King County
Restorical Research
Preliminary Site-Specific Analysis

This property has a documented history as a industrial and manufacturing facility predating 1986. Historical insurance policies issued during those prior operations and through 1986 could recover the cleanup costs already paid.

This property at 1128 SW Spokane St operated as a paint manufacturing facility under Asahipen America, Inc., doing business as Aspen Paint, with industrial infrastructure that included an underground storage tank containing heavy bunker oil fed by a buried metal pipeline. A leak in that pipeline was discovered in late 2000, attributed to rusting of the metal; cleanup under the Voluntary Cleanup Program included excavation and disposal of 5.73 tons of petroleum-contaminated soil, abandonment of the failed pipeline in place, and installation of an aboveground replacement. The site reached a No Further Action determination subject to a Restrictive Covenant limiting the property to traditional industrial uses and requiring five-year periodic reviews to manage residual contamination. That history could support an insurance cost recovery claim against carriers who issued insurance policies 40+ years ago.

Former Use
Former Industrial & Manufacturing
Address1128 SW Spokane St, Seattle, King County
Historical UseIndustrial & Manufacturing
Est. Operating SincePre-1986
StatusNo Further Action
Contamination & Investigation
Site Assessment Summary
ContaminantsHeavy bunker oil (petroleum hydrocarbons) detected in soil from underground pipeline leak
Media ImpactedSoil, Groundwater
Regulatory ProgramMTCA — Voluntary Cleanup Program
Ecology Site #4465

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 corroded metal pipeline and bunker oil UST that caused the contamination at Aspen Paint's facility are characteristic of infrastructure installed and in service well before 1986 — the very era when occurrence-based CGL policies were standard and effective pollution exclusions were not yet universal. The documented remediation record — 5.73 tons of bunker-oil-contaminated soil excavated and disposed of, a buried pipeline decommissioned — represents costs tied directly to that pre-1986 operational footprint. Carriers who issued CGL policies to Aspen Paint's operators during that window may still be obligated to recover those expenditures, and the ongoing Restrictive Covenant signals that residual contamination could sustain those obligations into the future.

Restorical's role is to locate viable historical policies, determine whether a successful cost recovery claim is possible, and assist our clients and their legal counsel to obtain insurance coverage for costs already incurred. Restorical's forensic accounting team works to re-establish and document past cleanup expenditures, ensuring the strongest possible basis for recovery.

Recovering Costs from an Older Cleanup

If this site reached No Further Action years ago, the original cleanup expenditures may be difficult to reconstruct. Restorical's forensic accounting team specializes in re-establishing and documenting past cleanup costs — even decades later — to build the strongest possible basis for an insurance recovery claim.

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

Task 1 — Research and Analysis
Restorical searches for viable historical insurance policies, researches the site history, analyzes the contamination impacts, and underwrites potential coverage — including a proprietary trigger analysis. At the end of Task 1, we provide a clear yes or no on whether a successful cost recovery is possible, along with a strategy and recommendation specific to your situation, even if you are not the policyholder.
Task 2 — Cost Recovery
When Task 1 confirms viable coverage, Restorical works with your legal counsel to tender the claim and negotiate recovery of costs already incurred. Restorical's forensic accounting team re-establishes and documents past cleanup expenditures, managing the claim process to ensure the insurance companies fulfill their obligation in a timely manner.

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This analysis is preliminary and based on publicly available records. Restorical Research is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.