With yet another tower crane collapse (this time on a retirement living project in Kent – thankfully no one was injured), we must ask ourselves “is the current crane safety regime in the UK adequate?”.
Sadly, crane-related incidents in the UK aren’t rare enough. There have been several accidents with fatal consequences in the last ten years:
- In 2014, a construction worker was hospitalised after a crane jib collapsed.
- In 2017, three men were killed while a crane was being erected.
- Most recently, a crane collapsed in East London, resulting in one death and a hundred people being evacuated from their homes.
With the scarcity of land and new residential or office developments literally growing upwards, cranes are an everyday sight in urban areas. They provide height and lifting capacities for constrained sites while occupying only a minimal footprint. However, working in densely populated areas also means that there can be catastrophic consequences in the event of failure. Continue reading