First Steps |
Starting Out |
Building Your Dream |
Finishing Touches |
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Site Safety |
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Site safety is a crucial part of any self-build
project. Below are some points that should make you think about
your own self-build site, and exactly how safe it currently is.
- Think carefully about letting your children visit the site.
If one gets hurt it is an irresponsible disregard of safety legislation.
- Wear protective footwear. Wellies and boots with
steel toecaps are readily available.
- Wear a hard hat!
- Buy two or three pairs of cheap plastic goggles
and always use them with grinding tools etc. The alternative is
likely to be half a day wasted in a hospital's outpatient department
which you would have preferred to have spent on the site.
- Ensure you follow the instructions when using hire tools. Do
not take off protective guards etc.
- If you have no experience of erecting scaffolding, order it
on a hire and erect basis. Make sure that the rails and kicking
boards that the law requires are provided. If your sub-contractors
want to erect the scaffold make sure they do so according to the
correct procedures.
- Keep petrol for mixers etc. in a locked hut.
- Use a R.C.D. contact breaker with electric power
tools, whether using a site supply, a cable from a neighbour or
a generator.
- If trenches are more than a metre deep treat them with respect
and ensure proper shoring is employed. Never work in a deep trench
alone on site.
- Crane off-loaded brick and block packs should only be stacked
two high and restacked by hand if in any way unstable.
- Concrete burns are a self-build speciality. Bad ones can leave
the bone visible and require skin grafts. Never let concrete or
mortar stay down wellies or in shoes for longer than a couple
of minutes. DO NOT LET SMALL CHILDREN PLAY WITH MORTAR AND CONCRETE.
If you get cement dust in your eyes wash them immediately with
plenty of clean water for at least 15 minutes and seek medical
advice without delay.
- There are still old type wooden ladders about without a wire
under each rung, often owned by self-builders. The only place
for them is on a bonfire. Travis Perkins branches can provide
the correct ladder for your project.
- Do not get involved with work on a roof unless you are well
used to heights and positively like it. If you are uneasy up there
you will not be able to do anything properly anyway.
- Self-builders regularly fall down stair wells. Use scrap timber
to form a rough balustrade until you fix the real one.
- Be obsessive about clearing away any loose boards
or noggins with a nail sticking out of them, and in case you miss
one, never wear shoes with a thin sole on the site.
- Keep antiseptic and plasters on site.
- Watch your back both when lifting a very heavy
item or if unloading more weight than you normally handle in a day.
The professionals can unload and stack 16 tons of building blocks
by hand with plenty of complaints but no injuries. If you try it,
the complaints will be of a different sort when you get out of bed
the next morning.
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