ConcreteMetric Navigation Menu
Concrete Formwork Types & Setup – Guide 2026 | ConcreteMetric
Australian Concrete Guide 2026

Concrete Formwork Types & Setup – Practical Guide

A complete guide to selecting, setting up, and stripping concrete formwork systems in Australia

Everything you need to know about concrete formwork types and setup in Australia 2026 — covering timber, steel, aluminium, plastic, and permanent formwork systems, AS 3610 compliance, formwork loading calculations, safe erection procedures, release agents, stripping times, and the most common formwork failures on Australian construction sites.

All Formwork Types
AS 3610 Compliant
Setup Procedures
Stripping Times

🪵 Concrete Formwork Types & Setup – Overview

Why formwork selection and correct setup are the foundation of safe, accurate, and cost-effective concrete construction in Australia in 2026

✔ What Is Concrete Formwork?

Concrete formwork is a temporary or permanent mould — constructed from timber, steel, aluminium, plastic, or composite materials — into which fresh concrete is poured and held until it gains sufficient strength to be self-supporting. Formwork defines the shape, dimensions, and surface finish of every concrete element. It must resist the hydrostatic pressure of wet concrete, support construction live loads, and maintain its position and shape without deflection until the concrete achieves adequate strength. In Australia, formwork is one of the highest-risk construction activities and is subject to strict design, erection, and inspection requirements under AS 3610 and the Work Health and Safety (WHS) regulations in 2026.

✔ Governing Standard – AS 3610

Concrete formwork in Australia is governed by AS 3610-1995 – Formwork for Concrete and its supplement AS 3610.1-2010, which specifies design requirements, materials, loading, deflection limits, construction tolerances, and inspection requirements. The standard applies to all formwork used for reinforced and prestressed concrete in buildings, bridges, and civil structures in Australia. Under the WHS Act, formwork above 4 metres in height is classified as high-risk construction work requiring a Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) and — in most Australian states — an engineer-designed formwork design brief for any system carrying significant load.

✔ Why Formwork Selection Matters

Formwork typically represents 30–50% of the total cost of a concrete structure — making it the single largest cost component in most concrete construction projects in Australia. Selecting the right formwork type for each element directly impacts pour quality, construction speed, surface finish, safety, and overall project economy. Poor formwork selection leads to excessive labour, surface defects, costly remediation, programme delays, and — in serious cases — formwork collapse causing injury or death. Understanding the options and their trade-offs is essential for every concrete practitioner in 2026.

🪵 Typical Wall Formwork Assembly – Component Layers

Concrete Core
Poured Concrete – Hydrostatic Pressure Acts on Form Face
Form Face (Sheathing)
Plywood / Steel Sheet – Direct Contact with Concrete
Walers / Soldiers
Horizontal Walers – Span Between Ties, Transfer Load to Props
Form Ties
Form Ties / She-Bolts – Hold Opposing Faces Apart Under Pressure
Props / Bracing
Adjustable Steel Props – Support Vertical Load & Lateral Stability
Concrete
Form face
Walers
Ties
Props

Indicative assembly only — actual configuration per AS 3610 design brief and engineer's specification

Concrete Formwork Types Used in Australia

Australia's construction industry uses several distinct formwork types, each suited to specific elements, project scales, and performance requirements. Selecting the correct concrete formwork type for each application is critical to achieving quality concrete, controlling costs, and maintaining programme in 2026.

1. Timber Formwork

Timber formwork — using structural plywood sheathing supported by sawn timber framing (studs, walers, and bracing) — is the most widely used formwork system on Australian residential and small commercial construction sites. F17 structural plywood in 17 mm or 19 mm thickness is the standard sheathing material, providing a smooth, consistent form face for standard concrete finishes. Timber formwork is low-cost for small volumes, easily cut and shaped for complex geometries, and does not require specialist equipment to erect. However, it has limited reuse potential — typically 3–8 uses before the face degrades — and requires skilled carpentry to achieve dimensionally accurate results. Timber formwork is the default system for residential slabs, footings, retaining walls, and light commercial elements in Australia in 2026.

🔵 Plywood Sheathing Selection – Australian Practice

For standard concrete formwork in Australia, specify F17 structural plywood (AS/NZS 2269 compliant) in 17 mm thickness for wall and column forms, and 19 mm for slab soffit forms spanning up to 600 mm between joists. Always apply a form release agent to the face before the first pour and between reuses to prevent bond between the plywood and concrete — uncoated plywood will bond strongly to concrete, causing surface tearing on stripping and damaging both the plywood and the concrete finish.

2. Steel Formwork

Steel formwork panels — fabricated from mild steel sheet welded to a structural steel frame — are used extensively on medium to large Australian commercial projects for walls, columns, bridge decks, and any application requiring high reuse cycles, dimensional accuracy, and consistent surface finish. A well-maintained steel form can achieve 100–300+ reuses, making the higher initial cost per panel economical across large-volume projects. Steel forms produce a smooth, hard concrete surface finish with minimal bug holes when correctly oiled and vibrated. They are heavier than timber or aluminium, requiring crane or forklift handling on larger sizes, and require investment in storage, cleaning, and maintenance between uses. Steel gang forms — large pre-assembled panels spanning full floor heights — are standard for high-rise residential and commercial wall construction throughout Australian capital cities in 2026.

3. Aluminium Formwork

Aluminium formwork systems — engineered modular panels fabricated from aluminium extrusions and sheet — combine the dimensional precision and reuse capability of steel with significantly reduced weight. Aluminium panels weighing 15–25 kg can be hand-carried by a single worker, whereas equivalent steel panels require mechanical handling. Aluminium formwork systems (such as Doka, PERI, and Aluma systems available throughout Australia) are highly suited to repetitive floor plates in residential apartment and hotel construction, where the same form configuration is reused across 20–50 identical floors. Initial system cost is high, but the labour saving from hand-setting rather than crane-setting panels delivers significant programme and cost advantages on repetitive structures. Aluminium formwork is increasingly the system of choice for medium and high-rise residential construction in Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane in 2026.

4. Plastic and Composite Formwork

Plastic and composite formwork panels — fabricated from polypropylene, fibreglass-reinforced plastic (FRP), or glass-fibre reinforced polymer (GFRP) — are lightweight, chemical-resistant, and capable of producing textured, patterned, or complex curved concrete surfaces that are difficult or impossible to achieve with flat timber or steel forms. Plastic forms are used for decorative architectural concrete, circular columns, curved walls, precast elements with special surface textures, and applications where corrosion resistance is required. Individual plastic panels are lighter than steel, making them suitable for hand-setting in confined spaces and on elevated working platforms. Durability and reuse life vary significantly by product quality — premium GFRP forms can achieve 100+ reuses while basic polypropylene panels may degrade after 20–30 pours.

5. Permanent Formwork Systems

Permanent formwork — also called stay-in-place formwork — remains in position after the concrete has cured and forms part of the permanent structure. In Australia, the most widely used permanent formwork systems are: Bondek and equivalent profiled steel decking for composite suspended slabs (where the steel deck becomes the positive tensile reinforcement and soffit form simultaneously), Dincel polymer wall formwork (permanent hollow-core polymer panels used as wall forms and insulation), and Foamular EPS void formers for ribbed slab systems. Permanent formwork eliminates stripping labour and disposal costs, but requires careful structural detailing to ensure the permanent form component is properly integrated with the concrete element design. The Bondek composite slab system is one of the most commonly used floor systems in Australian commercial and multi-residential construction.

✅ Bondek – Australia's Most Used Permanent Formwork

Bondek (by InfraBuild) and equivalent profiled steel decking systems are the dominant permanent slab formwork product in Australian commercial construction in 2026. The steel deck spans between supporting beams, acts as the working platform and concrete form during the pour, and then becomes integral tensile reinforcement in the completed composite slab. This eliminates soffit formwork, propping, and stripping entirely — typically saving 2–4 days per floor on multi-storey commercial projects compared to traditional suspended slab formwork.

6. Climbing and Jump Formwork

Climbing formwork systems — including crane-jumped forms, self-climbing hydraulic systems, and slip-forming equipment — are used for the repetitive vertical construction of cores, shear walls, pylons, chimneys, and high-rise building lift shafts in Australia. Self-climbing systems use hydraulic jacks to advance the form upward using anchor bolts cast into the previous lift of concrete, eliminating the need for crane lifts to reposition the form. Slip-forming is a continuous process in which the form moves upward slowly as concrete is placed, producing a seamless monolithic vertical element. These systems are highly specialist, expensive to mobilise, and are used exclusively on major high-rise and infrastructure projects in Australia's capital cities.

Concrete Formwork Types – Quick Comparison

Formwork Type Reuse Cycles Surface Finish Best Application Relative Cost
Timber / Plywood 3–8 uses Good (F5–F4) Residential, small commercial Low
Steel Panels 100–300+ uses Excellent (F2) Walls, columns, bridge decks High (low per use)
Aluminium Modular 200–500 uses Excellent (F2) Repetitive residential slabs High (very low per use)
Plastic / FRP 20–100 uses Textured / custom Decorative, columns, curves Medium–High
Bondek (permanent) Permanent N/A (soffit) Composite suspended slabs Medium
Dincel (permanent) Permanent N/A (wall face) Retaining walls, basement walls Medium
Climbing / Jump Project duration Good–Excellent High-rise cores, pylons Very High

Timber / Plywood

Reuse Cycles3–8 uses
Surface FinishGood (F5–F4)
Best ForResidential, small commercial
CostLow

Steel Panels

Reuse Cycles100–300+ uses
Surface FinishExcellent (F2)
Best ForWalls, columns, bridge decks
CostHigh (low per use)

Aluminium Modular

Reuse Cycles200–500 uses
Surface FinishExcellent (F2)
Best ForRepetitive residential slabs
CostHigh (very low per use)

Bondek (Permanent)

Reuse CyclesPermanent
Surface FinishN/A (soffit)
Best ForComposite suspended slabs
CostMedium

Plastic / FRP

Reuse Cycles20–100 uses
Surface FinishTextured / custom
Best ForDecorative, columns, curves
CostMedium–High

Climbing / Jump

Reuse CyclesProject duration
Surface FinishGood–Excellent
Best ForHigh-rise cores, pylons
CostVery High

Concrete Formwork Loads – AS 3610 Design

Formwork must be designed to safely carry all loads applied during concrete construction without failure, excessive deflection, or movement. AS 3610 defines the loads that formwork must be designed to resist, and all formwork on Australian construction sites should be erected in accordance with a design brief prepared or reviewed by a competent person — and by a registered engineer for any high-risk formwork system.

📐 Key Formwork Loads – AS 3610

Dead load (G): Self-weight of fresh concrete — approx. 24–25 kN/m³
Live load (Q): Min. 1.0 kPa for personnel + equipment on slab forms
Lateral pressure (walls): P = ρgH — full hydrostatic up to 25H (kPa) for standard concrete
Deflection limit: Span/270 max for formed surfaces (or 3 mm absolute max)
Vibration effects: Increase lateral pressure by 10–25% in vibrated zones
Wind load: Apply AS 1170.2 wind loads to exposed formwork and falsework

Lateral pressure on wall and column forms is the critical load case for most vertical formwork in Australia. Fresh concrete behaves as a liquid at the moment of placement — applying full hydrostatic pressure on the form face proportional to the head of concrete above. Understanding this pressure and designing form ties, walers, and studs accordingly is the key engineering task in wall and column formwork design. For related guidance on backfill pressure against concrete walls — a similar engineering principle — see our guide on backfill materials for retaining walls.

Concrete Formwork Setup – Step-by-Step Procedure

Correct formwork setup sequence is critical to achieving dimensional accuracy, structural adequacy, and safety. The procedure below applies to standard timber wall formwork setup on an Australian construction site in 2026.

🪵 Formwork Setup Sequence

📐 Set Out & Mark Wall Lines
🪵 Fix Kicker / Base Plate
🔩 Erect First Form Face
🔗 Place Rebar & Ties
🧱 Close Second Face
Plumb, Brace & Inspect

Step 1 – Set Out and Kicker

Before erecting any formwork, the wall or element position must be accurately set out from the structural grid using a total station, optical level, or laser level and marked on the slab or footing surface. A kicker — a small concrete upstand (typically 75 mm high) cast in the previous pour or a timber base plate fixed with shot-fired pins — is used to locate the base of the wall form panels accurately and prevent grout loss at the base of the pour. The kicker is one of the most frequently omitted details on Australian residential sites, leading to grout leakage, out-of-position walls, and difficult cleaning of the base of the formed face.

Step 2 – Erect First Form Face and Walers

The first face of the formwork (typically the off-form or back face) is erected against the kicker and plumbed vertically. Plywood sheathing panels are nailed or screwed to vertical studs (typically 90 × 45 mm LVL or structural timber at 300–450 mm centres), which are in turn supported by horizontal walers at maximum 600 mm vertical centres. The form face must be oiled or treated with release agent before erection — not just before pouring. All plywood joints must be tight to prevent grout leakage, which causes ugly fins on the concrete surface and wasted material.

Step 3 – Reinforcement and Form Ties

After the first face is erected and braced, reinforcement is placed and tied per the structural engineer's drawings. Form ties — typically coil ties, snap ties, or she-bolts — are then threaded through both form faces at the waler positions to hold the faces apart under concrete pressure. Form tie spacing is determined by the design lateral pressure and the waler capacity — ties at 600 mm horizontal and 600 mm vertical centres is a common starting configuration for N25 wall pours up to 3 m high. All ties must be fully engaged before the second form face is closed. See also our guide on assessing existing concrete structures for how tie holes and formwork marks are assessed in structural condition surveys.

Step 4 – Close, Plumb, and Brace

The second form face is erected, tied through to the first face, and plumbed vertically on both faces and in both directions using a spirit level or laser level. Adjustable push-pull props are fixed between the formwork and anchor points cast in the slab at maximum 1.8 m centres to maintain plumb and resist the horizontal forces from pouring and vibrating concrete. All bracing must be complete and checked before any concrete is placed. The inspection checklist below should be completed and signed off by the site supervisor before the pour commences.

Pre-Pour Formwork Inspection Checklist

A pre-pour formwork inspection is a mandatory step on every Australian concrete construction site in 2026. The following checklist covers the key items that must be verified before concrete placement begins.

  • Position and alignment: Form faces are at correct location per set-out marks — check both faces in plan and elevation with level or laser
  • Plumb and level: All vertical forms are plumb within AS 3610 tolerance (typically ±5 mm in 3 m height); slab soffits are level or at specified camber
  • All form ties installed and tightened: No ties missing — check waler-to-tie connections are fully engaged at every position
  • Bracing complete: All push-pull props installed, pinned, and adjusted — no formwork relying solely on its own weight or friction for stability
  • Kicker / base sealed: Base of wall forms sealed with foam backer rod, timber fillet, or mortar to prevent grout leakage
  • Release agent applied: All form face surfaces oiled or treated — no bare or dried-out plywood or steel in contact with concrete
  • Reinforcement cover: All bar chairs in position, cover to all faces meets specification, no bars touching form face directly
  • Penetration sleeves: All conduit, pipe, and service sleeves correctly positioned, secured, and capped to prevent concrete ingress
  • Cleanliness: All debris, timber off-cuts, wire, and water removed from inside the form — use air blower if necessary
  • SWMS signed: Safe Work Method Statement reviewed and signed by all workers involved in the pour for formwork above 4 metres

⚠️ High-Risk Formwork – Australian WHS Requirements

Under the Work Health and Safety Regulations 2017 (adopted in all Australian states and territories except Victoria, which has equivalent legislation), formwork and falsework that involves a total weight of concrete exceeding 2,000 kg or is erected at a height of 4 metres or more is classified as high-risk construction work. This requires a Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) before work commences. For large suspended slabs and complex shoring systems, an engineer-designed formwork design brief is required, and in most states an independent formwork inspection must be carried out before the pour. Failure to comply carries significant penalties and — in the event of formwork collapse — serious legal liability for the principal contractor and site management in 2026.

Formwork Stripping Times – Australian Practice

Formwork must not be stripped until the concrete has achieved sufficient compressive strength to support itself and any construction loads without cracking, deflecting excessively, or collapsing. Stripping too early is one of the leading causes of concrete surface defects, cracking, and structural damage on Australian construction sites. Minimum stripping times under AS 3610 depend on element type, concrete grade, ambient temperature, and whether propping is maintained after stripping.

🧱 Wall & Column Forms

Wall and column vertical forms can generally be stripped at 12–24 hours after placing concrete in warm Australian summer conditions (above 20°C), once the concrete has achieved sufficient strength to be self-supporting without lateral restraint. In cooler conditions (below 15°C) or with N25 concrete, allow 24–48 hours minimum. The formed face should be firm and non-yielding to a sharp blow before stripping commences.

🏗️ Slab Soffit (Propped)

Slab soffit formwork must remain in place — with all props maintained — until the concrete achieves at least 75% of its characteristic compressive strength (f'c). For N32 concrete, this is typically 7–10 days at standard Australian summer temperatures. Props must not be removed or repositioned until this strength is confirmed by 7-day cylinder test results or using the maturity method with embedded temperature loggers.

🔩 Suspended Beams

Beam soffit forms and beam side forms must remain supported until the beam concrete has achieved its full characteristic strength — minimum 28 days for standard grade concrete unless 28-day equivalent strength is confirmed earlier by cylinder testing. Post-tensioned beams require additional criteria related to stressing operations before soffit forms can be removed. Always follow the structural engineer's specified stripping sequence for post-tensioned elements.

🌡️ Temperature Effects

Australian summer heat accelerates concrete strength gain — an N32 pour in 30°C ambient conditions in Queensland or Western Australia may reach stripping strength in 8–12 hours. Conversely, winter pours in Victoria, Tasmania, and the ACT (below 10°C) significantly delay strength gain and require extended stripping times. Never strip based on elapsed time alone — use cylinder testing or the concrete maturity method to confirm strength before stripping any structural element.

📋 Re-propping Requirements

When soffit forms are stripped before the concrete has achieved full design strength, the element must be re-propped (back-propped) to prevent deflection under construction loads from floors above. AS 3610 and the structural engineer's specification define the re-propping requirements — typically back-props must be installed on the floor below the stripped slab and maintained until the slab achieves its full 28-day characteristic strength.

✅ Early Stripping with HE Cement

Using High Early Strength (HE) cement in the concrete mix is a common strategy on Australian construction sites where fast floor-to-floor cycle times are required. HE cement concrete can achieve the required stripping strength of 15–20 MPa in as little as 16–24 hours at summer temperatures, enabling next-day stripping and re-use of slab forms on repetitive construction — a significant programme advantage on fast-track multi-storey residential projects in Sydney and Melbourne in 2026.

Formwork Surface Finishes – AS 3610 Classes

AS 3610 defines five surface finish classes for formed concrete surfaces, ranging from the highest quality off-form architectural finish to basic structural finishes that will be concealed. Specifying the correct finish class determines the formwork face material, joint detail, tie spacing, and release agent required — and directly impacts the formwork system cost. The five classes are:

  • Class F2 – Architectural off-form: Highest quality — used for exposed structural concrete, architectural features, and feature walls. Requires steel or high-quality film-faced plywood forms, consistent tie pattern, and specialist release agent. All bug holes must be filled and rubbed back after stripping
  • Class F3 – High quality: Used for exposed concrete in public spaces, carparks, and commercial interiors. Steel or film-faced plywood with controlled tie spacing. Minor imperfections are acceptable
  • Class F4 – Standard: The most common finish class for general structural concrete — walls, columns, and beams that will receive a coating, cladding, or render. Standard plywood or steel forms are acceptable. Surface fins and minor bug holes are acceptable if not exceeding specified limits
  • Class F5 – Basic: For surfaces that will be permanently concealed — retaining wall backs, buried foundations, and concrete below finished ground level. Basic sawn timber or rough formwork is acceptable. Surface defects are acceptable provided they do not affect structural capacity
  • Class F6 – Rough: Blinding, mass fill, and temporary works where surface appearance is irrelevant. Any material that contains fresh concrete is acceptable

Frequently Asked Questions – Concrete Formwork Types & Setup

What is the most common formwork type used in Australian residential construction?
Timber formwork — using F17 structural plywood sheathing on sawn timber or LVL framing — is the most widely used formwork type in Australian residential construction in 2026. It is low cost, widely available, easily cut and shaped to suit irregular geometries, and does not require specialist equipment to erect or strip. For house slabs, footings, retaining walls, and light commercial elements, timber formwork is the default choice for Australian builders and concreters. Steel and aluminium modular systems become economical on repetitive commercial projects where the same form configuration is reused many times across multiple floors or pours.
How long before formwork can be stripped from a concrete wall in Australia?
Wall formwork can generally be stripped 12–24 hours after placing concrete in warm Australian conditions (ambient temperature above 20°C) using standard N25 or N32 concrete, once the concrete has achieved sufficient strength to be self-supporting. In cooler conditions — below 15°C as occurs in southern Australia during winter — allow 24–48 hours minimum. Always confirm the concrete is firm and non-yielding by tapping the form face before commencing stripping. The critical test is whether the concrete can support its own weight without cracking — not simply whether sufficient time has elapsed. For slabs and beams, significantly longer periods and cylinder test confirmation are required before soffit forms and props can be removed.
What is a SWMS and when is it required for formwork in Australia?
A Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) is a written document that identifies the high-risk construction work activities involved in a task and describes how each risk will be controlled. Under the Work Health and Safety Regulations 2017 (and equivalent state legislation), a SWMS is required before commencing any formwork work that involves a total concrete weight exceeding 2,000 kg or is erected at a height of 4 metres or more above the ground or a floor. The SWMS must be prepared by the principal contractor, made available to all workers before they start the work, and reviewed if conditions change. Workers must sign the SWMS confirming they have read and understood it before the pour commences. Failure to have a valid SWMS in place for high-risk formwork is a notifiable safety breach in all Australian states and territories in 2026.
What release agent should I use on concrete formwork in Australia?
Release agents (also called form oils or mould release agents) are applied to the form face before every pour to prevent concrete bonding to the formwork surface. In Australia, the most widely used products in 2026 are petroleum-based neat form oils (for standard timber and steel forms), water-based biodegradable release agents (increasingly specified on environmentally sensitive sites), and reactive stearate-based agents (for high-quality architectural off-form concrete where a chemically clean surface is required). Apply release agent as a thin, uniform film — excess oil causes surface staining, retardation patches, and finish defects. Never apply release agent over wet or contaminated form surfaces, and always re-apply between reuses. For Class F2 architectural concrete, follow the release agent manufacturer's specification precisely as compatibility with the concrete mix (particularly fly ash content) must be confirmed.
What causes formwork blow-out and how can it be prevented?
Formwork blow-out — where the form face deflects excessively or fails completely under the pressure of wet concrete — is caused by inadequate form tie spacing, insufficient waler capacity, missing or improperly engaged ties, and excessive concrete pour rate that builds up hydrostatic pressure faster than the formwork is designed to resist. Prevention requires: a proper formwork design brief by a competent person for any element above 1.2 m high; correct tie spacing calculated from the design lateral pressure; pour rate control — never exceed the rate of rise used in the pressure design; pre-pour inspection to confirm all ties are properly installed and tightened; and training of concrete placement crew on pour rate limits. On high walls, pouring in lifts rather than full height in a single continuous pour is the most effective way to limit maximum lateral pressure on the form.
What is Bondek formwork and where is it used in Australia?
Bondek is a profiled steel decking product manufactured by InfraBuild (formerly OneSteel) that is used as permanent soffit formwork for composite suspended concrete slabs in Australia. The corrugated steel deck spans between supporting beams, acts as the working platform and concrete form during the pour, and then remains permanently in place as part of the composite slab — providing positive tensile reinforcement at the soffit. Bondek and equivalent products (Condeck HP, Comform) are the dominant suspended slab system in Australian commercial, retail, industrial, and multi-residential construction. They eliminate soffit formwork, propping, and stripping entirely, typically saving 2–4 days per floor cycle on multi-storey buildings. The structural design of Bondek composite slabs is carried out using the manufacturer's published load tables and the requirements of AS 2327.1 (Composite Slabs).

Further Resources – Concrete Formwork Types & Setup

📐 AS 3610 Formwork Design

AS 3610-1995 and AS 3610.1-2010 provide the complete Australian framework for formwork design, materials, loading, tolerances, and inspection. Understanding the standard's requirements for lateral pressure calculation, deflection limits, and stripping criteria is essential for every formwork designer, site engineer, and construction manager working with concrete in Australia in 2026.

Read Guide →

🏗️ Concrete Slab Construction

Formwork setup is the foundation of every concrete slab construction sequence. Understanding how slab formwork interacts with vapour control layers, reinforcement placement, concrete grade selection, and curing procedures gives practitioners the complete picture of what it takes to deliver a durable, accurate, and compliant concrete slab on every Australian project.

Read Guide →

⚠️ WHS & Safe Formwork

Formwork collapse is one of the most serious hazard categories in Australian construction. Safe formwork practice requires a combination of correct engineering design, rigorous pre-pour inspection, SWMS compliance, trained personnel, and a site culture where no pour commences until all formwork safety checks have been signed off by a competent person — regardless of schedule pressure in 2026.

Read Guide →