Sacks, R; Rozenfeld, O and Rosenfeld, Y (2009) Spatial and temporal exposure to safety hazards in construction. Journal of Construction Engineering and Management, 135(8), pp. 726-736. ISSN 0733-9364
Abstract
Given the dynamic nature of construction sites, analysis of construction activities and their related hazards is inadequate for reliable risk assessment if it does not explicitly account for the likelihood of exposure of potential victims to hazardous situations. In traditional risk level calculations for manufacturing industries, the number of victims is factored with the likelihood of an accident and the potential severity, but the victims are simply assumed to be those typically present at the accident location. In construction, exposure cannot be accounted for at a generic metaproject level: it must be assessed at the level of the activities and the physical context in which they are performed. Conceptually, accidents are "loss-of-control events" to which victims are exposed; without exposure, no accident is assumed to occur. A set of algorithms has been developed to demonstrate estimation of the likelihood of exposure of construction workers to loss-of-control events. The algorithms have been implemented in a prototype software application designed to predict fluctuating risk levels in construction projects. The software implements the "construction hazard assessment with spatial and temporal exposure" model for managing safety in construction, which empowers planners at all levels to adjust construction plans to mitigate high levels of risk or to undertake appropriate proactive measures to ensure safety when high risk levels are unavoidable.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | algorithms; lean construction; occupational safety; spatial analysis; time dependence |
Date Deposited: | 11 Apr 2025 19:43 |
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2025 19:43 |