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Site Safety During Concrete Works – Complete Guide 2026 | ConcreteMetric
Concrete Construction Safety Guide 2026

Site Safety During Concrete Works

How to identify, control, and eliminate hazards during concrete placement, formwork, reinforcement, and finishing operations

A complete guide to site safety during concrete works in 2026. Covers PPE requirements, concrete chemical burn risks, formwork safety, concrete pump hazards, manual handling, working at heights, confined spaces, WHS compliance, and the hierarchy of controls — for supervisors, concreters, and safety officers on every concrete project.

PPE Requirements
Formwork Safety
Chemical Burns
WHS Compliance

🦺 Site Safety During Concrete Works – Guide

Essential safety knowledge for site supervisors, concreters, formwork carpenters, pump operators, and WHS officers managing concrete construction in 2026

✔ Why Concrete Work Is High Risk

Concrete construction is consistently ranked among the highest-risk activities in the construction industry. Workers face simultaneous hazards: caustic chemical burns from wet concrete (pH 12–13), formwork collapse under fresh concrete hydrostatic pressure, high-pressure pump line failures, falls from elevated decks during placement, crush injuries from concrete trucks and pumps, musculoskeletal injury from manual handling, and heat stress during summer pours. In Australia, Safe Work Australia statistics consistently show concrete construction among the top sources of serious injuries and fatalities in the construction sector each year in 2026.

✔ Legal Framework — WHS Act 2026

Concrete works must comply with the Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (Commonwealth, adopted by all Australian states and territories) and the WHS Regulations 2017, which require all persons conducting a business or undertaking (PCBUs) to eliminate risks to health and safety so far as is reasonably practicable, or if elimination is not reasonably practicable, to minimise risks through the hierarchy of controls. Relevant codes of practice include the Code of Practice: Formwork (Safe Work Australia), the Concrete and Masonry guidance material, and any state-specific regulations. In the US, OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Q governs concrete and masonry construction safety.

✔ Safe Work Method Statements (SWMS)

For high-risk construction work involving concrete — including formwork over 4 metres, concrete pumping, reinforcement placement at height, and any work in or near excavations — a Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) is legally required in Australia before work commences. The SWMS must identify each high-risk activity, the hazards involved, the controls to be applied, and the responsible person. It must be reviewed and signed by workers before starting work, updated when conditions change, and kept on site for inspection. The SWMS is a living document — not a compliance exercise — and must reflect actual site conditions and real controls in 2026.

Site Safety During Concrete Works — Overview

Effective site safety during concrete works requires a systematic approach — identifying every hazard before work begins, applying controls in strict priority order (hierarchy of controls), ensuring all workers understand and follow the controls, and monitoring compliance throughout the pour. Concrete work is time-pressured — once the truck arrives, the pace accelerates and shortcuts become tempting. The most dangerous concrete pours are rushed ones. A well-planned concrete pour with a strong safety pre-start briefing, all PPE on site and being worn, and a clearly designated safety-responsible supervisor is the foundation of incident-free concrete construction in 2026. For structural context on what is being built and why each element matters, see our guide on understanding concrete load paths.

🚨 The Five Highest-Risk Activities in Concrete Construction

  • Formwork collapse — the leading cause of multiple fatalities in a single incident in concrete construction globally. Fresh concrete weighs 2,400 kg/m³ — a partial collapse of formwork supporting a 200 mm slab over 50 m² releases 24 tonnes of concrete.
  • Concrete pump line blockage and hose whip — a blocked concrete pump line can fail explosively, releasing high-pressure concrete and sending the hose end whipping violently across the work area.
  • Concrete chemical burns — wet concrete is highly alkaline (pH 12–13) and causes full-thickness (third-degree) skin burns that can require skin grafts. Workers often don't feel the burn until hours later — by which time severe damage has occurred.
  • Falls during elevated slab placement — placing concrete on upper floor decks without adequate edge protection, fall arrest systems, or perimeter scaffolding.
  • Struck by concrete truck or pump — concrete mixer trucks and concrete pump trucks have large blind spots. Workers on foot in the same zone as moving concrete vehicles face serious crush and run-over risk.

📋 Concrete Safety — Key WHS Reference Standards (Australia 2026)

WHS Act 2011 (Cth) + State WHS Acts — Primary duty of care for all concrete works
WHS Regulations 2017 — SWMS required for high-risk construction work
Safe Work Australia Code of Practice: Formwork — Formwork design, erection, and stripping
AS 3610 — Formwork for concrete (design, construction, stripping)
AS/NZS 1891 — Industrial fall-arrest systems and devices
AS/NZS 4602 — High-visibility safety garments
OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Q — US: Concrete and masonry construction

🦺 Hierarchy of Controls — Applied to Concrete Works

1
ELIMINATE the hazard
e.g. Use precast panels instead of in-situ formwork at height
2
SUBSTITUTE with lower risk
e.g. Use pump with remote control instead of manual chute handling
3
ISOLATE the hazard
e.g. Exclusion zones around concrete pump, truck reversing area
4
ENGINEERING controls
e.g. Edge protection, perimeter scaffolding, formwork propping
5
ADMINISTRATIVE controls
e.g. SWMS, pre-start briefings, spotter for reversing trucks, pour schedule
6
PPE — last line of defence
e.g. Waterproof gloves, boots, eye protection, hard hat, hi-vis vest

Mandatory PPE for Concrete Works

⛑️
Hard Hat
Mandatory
🦺
Hi-Vis Vest
Mandatory
👓
Safety Glasses
Mandatory
🧤
Waterproof Gloves
Mandatory
👢
Rubber Boots
Mandatory
👕
Long Sleeves
Mandatory
😷
Dust Mask (P2)
Cutting / Grinding
🔊
Hearing Protection
Vibrating/Noisy plant

PPE is the last — not the first — line of defence. Always apply higher-order controls (elimination, engineering) before relying on PPE to protect workers from concrete hazards.

Concrete Chemical Hazards — Burns and Skin Damage

Wet concrete is one of the most underestimated chemical hazards in construction. Its high alkalinity (pH 12–13, comparable to household bleach) causes alkaline chemical burns that destroy tissue progressively — the longer the contact, the deeper the damage. Unlike acid burns, which are immediately painful and cause the victim to react quickly, concrete alkali burns may not be felt for several hours. Workers have removed their boots after a shift to discover severe, deep burns that required skin grafting because wet concrete had entered their boots during a pour without their noticing.

🔥 Concrete Burn Mechanism

Fresh concrete contains calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)₂), sodium hydroxide, and potassium hydroxide — all strongly alkaline compounds. These react with the fatty acids in skin tissue in a process called saponification, breaking down cell membranes and progressively destroying tissue layers. The burn is compounded by the exothermic hydration of cement, which raises concrete temperature to 40–70°C in mass pours — adding thermal injury to the chemical burn. Full-thickness burns requiring surgical debridement and skin grafting are documented in concrete workers after prolonged contact as short as 2–4 hours.

🧤 Prevention — Skin Protection

All workers in contact with wet concrete must wear: waterproof rubber or neoprene gloves (not fabric — concrete soaks through), knee-high rubber boots for work in poured concrete (not leather or fabric footwear), long-sleeved shirts and long trousers to prevent arm and leg contact, and safety glasses or goggles to prevent splash to eyes. Any clothing that becomes saturated with wet concrete must be removed immediately and the skin washed with large amounts of clean water. Gloves and boots should be rinsed with clean water during and after a pour to prevent concrete from setting against the skin inside the PPE.

👁️ Eye and Respiratory Hazards

Wet concrete splashing into the eyes causes severe chemical conjunctivitis and can cause permanent corneal damage. Safety glasses or goggles must be worn during all concrete placement, vibration, and pump operations. For cutting, grinding, or drilling hardened concrete, silica dust (crystalline silica, SiO₂) is released as fine respirable particles — the primary cause of silicosis, a progressive and incurable lung disease. All dry cutting, grinding, or drilling of hardened concrete requires a P2 respirator (minimum) or P3 for sustained operations, wet cutting methods wherever possible, and local exhaust ventilation. Australia's WHS Regulations 2020 introduced specific silica dust exposure standards requiring air monitoring on all construction sites with concrete grinding or cutting operations.

🚿 Emergency First Aid for Concrete Burns

Every concrete pour site must have clean running water immediately accessible. On detection of concrete contact with skin: immediately remove contaminated clothing, flush the affected area with large volumes of clean water for at least 20 minutes, do not apply creams, oils, or vinegar, and seek medical attention for all exposures to eyes or any contact exceeding 30 minutes. Do not wait until burning pain is felt — by that stage, significant tissue damage has already occurred. All site first aid kits must include eyewash stations (sealed saline bottles) and the emergency procedures for concrete contact must be covered in every pre-start safety briefing before concrete placement begins.

🌡️ Heat Stress During Concrete Works

Concrete pours in summer frequently occur in hot, humid conditions that create serious heat stress risk. Workers in heavy PPE (waterproof gloves, long sleeves, boots, hard hat) performing physically demanding work (raking, vibrating, screeding) generate substantial body heat. Heat exhaustion and heat stroke can develop rapidly — particularly in early morning summer pours when concrete is ordered for low ambient temperatures but workers' bodies are not yet heat-acclimatised. Controls include: scheduling pours for early morning, providing shaded rest areas, mandatory rest breaks every 45 minutes in temperatures above 35°C, access to cool drinking water at all times, and buddy systems to monitor for heat illness symptoms.

🏗️ Silica Dust — Occupational Exposure Limits

Australia's Workplace Exposure Standard (WES) for respirable crystalline silica is 0.05 mg/m³ (8-hour TWA) — reduced from 0.1 mg/m³ in 2020. This limit can be exceeded within minutes during dry grinding or cutting of concrete without dust controls. Engineering controls — wet methods, on-tool extraction, enclosed cutting equipment — must be used before respiratory PPE is relied upon. All workers regularly exposed to silica dust from concrete cutting or grinding must be enrolled in a health monitoring program (periodic lung function tests and chest X-rays) under Australian WHS Regulations. Silicosis diagnosis has increased among younger construction workers in Australia in recent years, making silica dust management one of the highest-priority safety issues in concrete works in 2026.

Formwork Safety — The Critical Risk

Formwork collapse is the most catastrophic failure mode in concrete construction — it kills multiple workers simultaneously, often with little or no warning. A correctly designed and erected formwork system is a structural element that must carry the full weight of fresh concrete, construction live loads, and dynamic loads from vibration and placement. Fresh concrete has a unit weight of approximately 24 kN/m³ — a 250 mm slab over a 10 m × 10 m area weighs 600 kN (60 tonnes). This load must be safely supported by the formwork and falsework system until the concrete achieves sufficient strength to be self-supporting. Formwork safety is governed by AS 3610 in Australia and the Safe Work Australia Code of Practice: Formwork.

Formwork Design Requirements

All formwork supporting slabs more than 3 metres above the ground, or in any situation where collapse could cause injury, must be designed by a Registered Professional Engineer (RPEQ in Queensland, CPEng elsewhere). The design must include: the imposed loads from fresh concrete at the maximum pour rate, vibration loads, construction equipment loads, the formwork frame and sheeting dimensions and spacing, the propping system layout and capacity, and the de-propping sequence. No substitutions of different prop sizes or spacings from the design are permitted on site without written engineer approval. Formwork drawings must be on site during erection, and a pre-pour inspection by the responsible engineer or nominated supervisor must confirm compliance before concrete placement begins.

Formwork Inspection Checklist

  • All props plumb: Every prop must be vertical — even small out-of-plumb creates eccentric loading that reduces capacity dramatically. Check with a level at each prop base.
  • Props seated on base plates and sole plates: Props must never sit directly on soft ground or compressible surfaces. Timber sole plates (minimum 50 mm thick) distribute the load across a larger subgrade area. Base plates prevent the prop foot from punching through the sole plate.
  • All prop extensions within maximum extension limit: Telescopic props have a maximum extension length specified by the manufacturer. Never extend a prop beyond its rated capacity — check before setting.
  • Bracing complete and tightened: All formwork bracing must be installed per the design drawings and all wedges, clamps, and ties tightened before any concrete is placed. Even a partially incomplete bracing system can collapse under the hydrostatic pressure of a pour.
  • No damaged or deformed props: Props with bent shafts, stripped threads, or damaged pins must be removed and replaced. Never use damaged props — their load capacity is unknown and potentially zero.
  • Re-propping in place for multi-storey: In multi-storey construction, freshly placed slabs cannot carry construction loads until they reach design strength. Re-propping from the slab below through to the next floor down must be in place before any loads are applied to the new slab.

⚠️ Warning Signs of Formwork Distress During a Pour

If any of the following signs occur during a concrete pour, immediately stop pouring and evacuate the work area beneath the formwork: cracking or popping sounds from the formwork or props, visible deflection of formwork sheeting greater than 10 mm between supports, any prop tilting or walking on its base, leakage of concrete from joints increasing in volume, visible bowing of form faces, any prop seat or base plate sinking into the ground, or any worker reporting the formwork feels unstable underfoot. Do not re-enter the formwork area until an engineer has inspected the system and confirmed it is safe to continue. Attempting to continue a pour on distressed formwork has resulted in multiple fatalities on Australian construction sites.

Concrete Pump Safety

Concrete pumps are essential for efficient placement on commercial and residential projects, but they introduce significant hazards that must be controlled. The primary risks are: line blockage and hose whip from blocked or failed delivery lines, boom collapse on truck-mounted boom pumps, ground bearing failure of outrigger pads on soft ground, and electrical contact from the pump boom touching overhead power lines. In Australia, concrete pump operators must hold a WorkCover-recognised certificate of competency for concrete placing boom operation, and the pump must be maintained and inspected in accordance with the manufacturer's requirements and AS 2550 (cranes, hoists, and winches — relevant to pump boom operations).

Concrete Pump Hazard Controls

  • Overhead power line exclusion zones: Maintain a minimum 3-metre clearance between any part of the pump boom and overhead power lines at all times. If power lines cannot be de-energised or relocated, do not use a boom pump in that area — use a ground pump with manual hose instead. Power line contact is immediately fatal.
  • Outrigger pad sizing for ground conditions: On soft ground, standard outrigger pads are insufficient. Engineer outrigger pad sizing based on the pump outrigger force and the soil bearing capacity. On clay or made ground, timber or steel spreader mats may be required. Check the soil conditions at each outrigger location before extending the outriggers. Never operate a boom pump with outriggers on soft, uneven, or undermined ground.
  • Exclusion zone during boom operation: A minimum exclusion zone of 1.5 × boom radius must be maintained around the pump during operation — enforced by physical barriers or a designated spotter. Workers should not stand under the boom or delivery line.
  • Pipeline pressure relief before maintenance: Before clearing a blocked line or opening any delivery pipe connection, the pump pressure must be fully relieved. Never loosen any pipeline fitting under pressure — the fitting will be ejected with extreme force, and the resulting concrete release has caused serious injuries and deaths.
  • Hose holder safety: The end hose (rubber delivery hose) must always be held by a minimum of two workers — one at the hose end, one at the coupling. A single worker cannot safely control a charged hose. When the pump starts suddenly, the hose recoil can throw an unprepared worker to the ground.

Working at Heights During Concrete Works

Placing concrete on elevated slabs, bridge decks, and upper floor formwork decks exposes workers to fall risks. In Australia, any work at a height of 2 metres or more requires fall prevention or fall arrest controls under the WHS Regulations. During concrete pours at height, conventional scaffolding may be impractical — the pour must proceed without interruption and workers are actively moving across the formwork deck. The following controls are mandatory for elevated concrete pours in 2026.

  • Perimeter edge protection: All open edges of formwork decks, slab edges, and floor openings must have compliant edge protection — a top rail at 900–1100 mm, a mid-rail, and a kickboard at 150 mm — before any worker accesses the deck. Edge protection must be installed before the formwork deck is used as a working platform.
  • Floor penetration protection: All penetrations in the formwork deck (for columns, stairs, services) must be covered with load-rated covers and secured against displacement, or surrounded by edge protection to prevent falls through. Uncovered penetrations in formwork decks are a leading cause of falls in concrete construction.
  • Fall arrest systems where edge protection is impractical: At slab edges where perimeter edge protection cannot be installed (e.g., cantilever slab edges during pour), workers must use industrial fall-arrest harnesses anchored to rated anchor points. Harnesses must be inspected before each use and worn correctly — harnesses worn loosely or attached to unrated anchor points provide no protection.
  • Pump hose management at height: The concrete delivery hose must be managed carefully at elevated slab edges — the hose recoil during pumping can push a worker backward off the edge. Establish safe hose routes away from slab edges and ensure hose holders are positioned away from the perimeter.

Manual Handling in Concrete Works

Manual handling injuries — particularly back injuries from lifting, carrying, and working in bent-over positions — are the most frequent injury type in concrete construction, even though they are less dramatic than formwork collapses or pump accidents. Reinforcing bar handling, concrete vibrator use, screed board operation, and trowelling all involve sustained awkward postures and repetitive loading of the spine and shoulders. Controls include mechanical aids (rebar tying guns instead of manual tying, ride-on screeds for large slabs, extended vibrator handles), job rotation to limit exposure of any individual worker to sustained repetitive tasks, and pre-pour stretching and warm-up routines.

✅ Concrete Pour Safety Pre-Start Checklist — 2026

  • SWMS reviewed and signed: All workers have read, understood, and signed the SWMS for the concrete pour before work commences
  • PPE issued and worn: All workers have rubber boots, waterproof gloves, safety glasses, hi-vis vest, hard hat, and long-sleeved clothing
  • Eyewash and first aid on site: Sealed saline eyewash bottles, first aid kit, and first aider identified and present
  • Formwork pre-pour inspection complete: Signed inspection record confirming all props, bracing, and edge protection are per design
  • Exclusion zones established: Concrete truck and pump exclusion zones marked and enforced by a designated spotter
  • Overhead power lines checked: Minimum clearance from pump boom and delivery lines to power lines confirmed — or lines de-energised
  • Emergency contacts posted: Emergency services (000), site first aider, and on-call engineer numbers posted at the site entry
  • Communication plan established: Clear signals agreed between pump operator, hose holder, and concrete truck driver — all understand stop signals
  • Heat/weather assessment: Work schedule adjusted for temperature, wind, and humidity — rest breaks and hydration plan in place for hot conditions
  • Silica dust controls active: Wet cutting equipment in place for any subsequent concrete cutting — dry cutting prohibited without P2+ respiratory protection

PPE Requirements Reference Table — Concrete Works 2026

The table below provides a complete reference for mandatory and recommended PPE for each activity type during concrete construction in 2026, based on WHS Regulations and Safe Work Australia guidance.

Concrete Activity Head Protection Eye/Face Protection Hand Protection Foot Protection Body / Respiratory
Concrete placement (slab pour) Hard hat (Class C) Safety glasses Waterproof rubber gloves Knee-high rubber boots Hi-vis vest, long sleeves & trousers
Concrete vibrating / compacting Hard hat Safety glasses Anti-vibration + waterproof gloves Rubber boots Hi-vis, long sleeves
Formwork erection / stripping Hard hat Safety glasses Work gloves Steel-capped boots Hi-vis vest, long sleeves
Reinforcing bar placement Hard hat Safety glasses Heavy-duty work gloves Steel-capped boots Hi-vis vest, long sleeves
Concrete pump operation Hard hat Safety glasses + face shield Waterproof heavy gloves Rubber boots Hi-vis, long sleeves
Concrete grinding / cutting Hard hat Full face shield + safety glasses Work gloves Steel-capped boots P2 respirator (min), hi-vis, long sleeves, hearing protection
Concrete finishing / trowelling Hard hat (sun hat for outdoors) Safety glasses Waterproof rubber gloves Rubber boots Hi-vis, long sleeves, sunscreen for outdoor
Elevated slab pour (height ≥2m) Hard hat Safety glasses Waterproof gloves Rubber boots Hi-vis, long sleeves, fall-arrest harness at open edges
Confined space concrete work Hard hat Safety glasses Waterproof gloves Rubber boots Full PPE + confined space entry permit + gas monitoring

All Concrete Activities (Mandatory)

HeadHard hat — always
EyesSafety glasses — always
Hi-Vis VestAlways worn on site
BodyLong sleeves & trousers

Wet Concrete Contact

HandsWaterproof rubber gloves
FeetKnee-high rubber boots
Skin contactFlush with water 20 min

Cutting / Grinding Hardened Concrete

FaceFull face shield
RespiratoryP2 respirator minimum
HearingEarmuffs or earplugs
Preferred methodWet cutting — dust suppression

Frequently Asked Questions — Site Safety During Concrete Works

What PPE is required for concrete work in Australia?
The minimum mandatory PPE for all workers involved in concrete placement in Australia includes: a hard hat (safety helmet complying with AS/NZS 1801), high-visibility vest or clothing (AS/NZS 4602), safety glasses (AS/NZS 1337), waterproof rubber or neoprene gloves (not fabric — concrete soaks through fabric and causes burns), knee-high rubber boots (for workers in poured concrete — not leather or fabric footwear), and long-sleeved shirts and long trousers to prevent skin contact with wet concrete. For concrete cutting or grinding operations, additional PPE is required: a full face shield, P2 respirator (minimum), and hearing protection. Workers at height of 2 metres or more require fall-arrest harnesses at open edges where perimeter protection is not installed.
Can wet concrete cause chemical burns?
Yes — wet concrete is a significant chemical burn hazard. Fresh concrete has a pH of 12–13 (highly alkaline), comparable to drain cleaner. Contact with skin causes alkaline chemical burns that destroy tissue through saponification (breakdown of skin cell membranes). The critical danger is that these burns are often not felt for 2–4 hours after contact — by which time significant deep tissue damage may have already occurred. Workers who pour concrete into their boots and do not remove them immediately have suffered full-thickness burns requiring skin grafts. All exposed skin must be covered with appropriate PPE, and any suspected concrete contact with skin must be immediately flushed with large amounts of clean water for at least 20 minutes, followed by medical assessment.
When is a SWMS required for concrete works in Australia?
A Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) is required under the WHS Regulations 2017 for any high-risk construction work involving concrete. This includes: formwork construction or stripping at a height of 4 metres or more above the ground; any concrete work in the vicinity of excavations; concrete pump operation; work near energised electrical infrastructure; work involving confined spaces (e.g., bored pier construction); and any work at heights of 2 metres or more where falls are a risk. The SWMS must identify each high-risk activity, the specific hazards associated with it, the control measures to be implemented, and the responsible person. It must be completed before work starts, communicated to all workers, signed by each worker, and kept on site throughout the works.
What are the main formwork safety requirements in Australia?
Formwork safety in Australia is governed by AS 3610 (Formwork for Concrete) and the Safe Work Australia Code of Practice: Formwork. Key requirements include: formwork supporting slabs or other elements more than 3 metres above the ground must be designed by a Registered Professional Engineer; the design must account for fresh concrete hydrostatic pressure, vibration loads, and construction live loads; all props must be plumb, on base plates and sole plates, and within their maximum extension limits; no modifications to the design (different prop spacing, substituted members) without written engineer approval; a pre-pour inspection must be conducted and documented by the responsible person before any concrete is placed; and all workers must evacuate the area beneath the formwork if signs of distress are observed during the pour.
What is the silica dust risk in concrete construction and how is it managed?
Silica dust is generated when hardened concrete is cut, ground, drilled, or broken — releasing fine particles of crystalline silica (SiO₂) that, when inhaled over time, cause silicosis — a progressive, irreversible, and potentially fatal lung disease. In Australia, the Workplace Exposure Standard (WES) for respirable crystalline silica is 0.05 mg/m³ (8-hour TWA), which can be exceeded within minutes during dry grinding or cutting. Management requires: preferring wet cutting methods (suppresses dust at source), using on-tool dust extraction for dry cutting, providing P2 respirators as a minimum where airborne dust cannot be fully controlled by engineering means, conducting air monitoring on sites with regular concrete cutting, and enrolling affected workers in health surveillance (periodic lung function tests). Dry cutting of concrete without dust suppression or respiratory protection is a serious WHS breach in 2026.
How should concrete pump safety be managed on site?
Concrete pump safety management requires: verifying the pump operator holds a valid certificate of competency for boom pump operation; conducting a pre-operational inspection of the pump boom, hydraulic lines, delivery pipes, and outrigger system; sizing outrigger pads appropriately for the ground bearing capacity at each outrigger location; establishing and enforcing a minimum 3-metre exclusion zone from all overhead power lines; confirming the exclusion zone around the pump with physical barriers and a spotter; never clearing a blocked line without first relieving all hydraulic pressure; ensuring the end hose is held by a minimum of two workers; and immediately shutting down the pump if any delivery line joint shows signs of leakage or the line develops a visible kink. A pre-operational checklist must be completed and signed by the operator before each day of use.
What heat safety measures are needed during summer concrete pours?
Heat stress during summer concrete pours is a genuine risk that requires proactive management. Controls include: scheduling pours for the coolest part of the day (early morning), ensuring all workers are well hydrated before the pour begins (drink 200–250 mL of water every 15–20 minutes during work in heat, not just when thirsty), establishing a shaded rest area accessible during breaks, implementing mandatory rest breaks every 45 minutes for work in temperatures above 35°C, using a buddy system where workers monitor each other for heat illness symptoms (dizziness, confusion, cessation of sweating, rapid pulse), identifying a heat first-aider on site who can recognise and respond to heat exhaustion and heat stroke, and acclimatising new or returning workers gradually to hot conditions over 7–14 days before they work full shifts in summer heat. Heat stroke is a medical emergency — call 000 and cool the worker immediately with water and shade.

Concrete Site Safety Resources

📘 Safe Work Australia — Concrete & WHS Guidance

Safe Work Australia publishes comprehensive guidance on WHS compliance for concrete construction, including the Code of Practice: Formwork, guidance on silica dust management, safe use of concrete pumps, and model SWMS templates for high-risk concrete construction work. These documents represent the minimum legal standard for managing concrete work hazards in Australia in 2026 and are available free of charge from the Safe Work Australia website.

ACI Safety Resources →

🔍 Assessing Existing Concrete Safety Risks

When working on or modifying existing concrete structures — cutting penetrations, demolishing slabs, breaking out footings, or core drilling — additional hazards arise beyond those of new construction: unknown reinforcement locations, asbestos in old concrete mixes, lead paint on surfaces, unknown loading and structural condition, and silica-rich dust from cutting operations. Our guide to assessing existing concrete structures covers the investigation methods, hazard identification, and safe work procedures for working on existing concrete in 2026.

Read the Guide →

🏗️ Sub-Base Safety During Concrete Preparation

Sub-base preparation — excavation, compaction, and preparation of the ground before concrete placement — introduces its own safety hazards separate from the concrete pour itself: excavation collapse, plant and pedestrian interaction, underground services strikes, and dust from compaction works. Understanding the complete safety requirements for the full concrete construction sequence — from sub-base preparation through to final finishing — ensures no phase of the project is managed without adequate hazard controls in 2026.

Read the Guide →