Structural engineer crushed by scaffold tubes

Two companies have been fined after a structural engineer received serious crush injuries when a bundle of scaffold tubes weighing about one tonne rolled onto his legs while he was visiting a client’s construction site.

Southwark Crown Court was told how, on 15 September 2015, the engineer, accompanied by two managers at the site in London, approached four bundles of stacked scaffold tubes.

The top bundle was disturbed, rolled off and fell onto the engineer’s lower legs. It took several attempts to free him from under the bundle. He suffered fractures to both ankles and a number of fractures on his right leg.

The scaffold bundles were delivered earlier that day and belonged to scaffolding firm PHD Modular Access Services Ltd.

St George City Ltd was the Principal Contractor for the site, where demolition activities were taking place within a very confined area.

Signed off

An HSE investigation found that PHD failed to ensure that control measures specified in the company’s risk assessment – material storage area to be fully segregated using physical barriers – were in place to prevent access by unauthorised persons.

St George City had signed off on PHD’s storage requirements and should have been conscious of the practical difficulties concerning deliveries and storage due to the confined nature of the site.

On the day of the incident, St George site management had become aware that the scaffold materials had not been segregated but no action was taken.

PHD Modular Access Services Ltd, of Uxbridge pleaded guilty to breaching safety regulations and was fined £50,000 with costs of £7,777.99.

St George City Limited, which is part of the Berkeley Group, also pleaded guilty and was fined £130,000 and ordered to pay costs of £7830.79.

After the hearing, HSE inspector Gabriella Dimitrov said: “The contractors knew that it was a congested site with large demolition machines tracking around and as such required careful planning with regards to material arrivals and storage. This incident could have been easily prevented had suitable barriers been provided.”