Carter, G and Smith, S D (2006) Safety hazard identification on construction projects. Journal of Construction Engineering and Management, 132(2), pp. 197-205. ISSN 0733-9364
Abstract
Hazard identification is fundamental to construction safety management; unidentified hazards present the most unmanageable risks. This paper presents an investigation indicating the current levels of hazard identification on three U.K. construction projects. A maximum of only 6.7% of the method statements analyzed on these projects managed to identify all of the hazards that should have been identified, based upon current knowledge. Maximum hazard identification levels were found to be 0.899 (89.9%) for a construction project within the nuclear industry, 0.728 (72.8%) for a project within the railway industry, and 0.665 (66.5%) for a project within both the railway and general construction industry sector. The results indicate that hazard identification levels are far from ideal. A discussion on the reasons for low hazard identification levels indicates key barriers. This leads to the presentation of an Information Technology (IT) tool for construction project safety management (Total-Safety) and, in particular, a module within Total-Safety designed to help construction personnel develop method statements with improved levels of hazard identification.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | construction methods; hazards; knowledge-based systems; occupation safety; risk management; United Kingdom |
Date Deposited: | 11 Apr 2025 19:42 |
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2025 19:42 |