Bouygues fined £175,000 for concrete beam death

Grant Prior 10 years ago
Share

Bouygues UK has been fined £175,000 after a banksman was killed by a concrete beam during a dangerous lifting operation in strong winds at a hospital construction site in Essex.

The contractor was also ordered to pay £80,000 in costs after Guilherme de Oliveira, 44, from Portugal, was crushed to death at Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford on November 10 2008.

Chelmsford Crown Court heard that Mr de Oliveira was working for Bouygues through an agency as a banksman, and was fixing beams across supporting towers to form part of the concrete structure for a new building.

The beams were lifted from ground level to the work area by a tower crane.

Mr de Oliveira and another banksman climbed the support towers to unhook the lifting chains from the concrete beam – which was seven metres in length and was due to sit almost three metres off the ground.

The beam was lifted into position, but the weather on the day was worsening with increasing wind speeds.

Before Mr de Oliviera was able to disconnect the chains on the beam at his side, the wind gusted at such a speed that it exceeded the safe working parameters of the tower crane.

As a result, the slew brakes slipped and the crane moved with the wind.

The sudden movement caused the crane to swing round with the beam, which caught Mr de Oliveira and crushed him between the beam and an adjacent tower. The wind speed at that time was in excess of 72km/h.

An HSE investigation found that four tower cranes were in operation at the site, each one fitted with a sensor that measured wind speed and provided warnings at pre-set values: an amber warning at 50 km/h or more and a red warning at 72km/h or more.

The sensors were linked to a computer in the site office to allow managers to monitor data and supervise lifting operations.

But at the time of the incident it was not being monitored and on-site arrangements allowed crane operators to check their own wind speed displays. So they would only have stopped lifting if they considered it necessary, and not necessarily when the maximum wind speed limit was exceeded.

HSE concluded that there was inadequate planning and supervision of the work.

Had a suitable management procedure been in place and followed there would have been the opportunity to properly consider the deteriorating weather conditions and then take the tower cranes out of operation.

Bouygues UK Ltd, of London, SE1 was fined £175,000 and ordered to pay £80,000 in costs after pleading guilty to breaching lifting regulations.

Bouygues said: “We sincerely regret that this tragic accident, which resulted in an individual losing his life, should have occurred on one of our sites.

“Our thoughts and deepest sympathies are with the family and friends of Mr de Oliveira.

“The safety and welfare of our staff and of those that work with us through our supply chain is top priority at Bouygues UK.

“We are focussed on learning lessons from the past and continually assessing,  improving and embedding health and safety practices and behaviours across our business so that people go home safely.”

Speaking after the hearing HSE Inspector Dominic Elliss, said: “Although the judge was not satisfied that the company’s failings was a direct cause for Mr de Oliveira’s death, he said there was a systemic failure where a risk of serious injury was foreseeable.”

“Lifting operations can be highly hazardous and the appropriate standards are clearly set out in both the regulations and industry guidance.

“There is no excuse to ignore them and I would urge all those undertaking such work to review the effectiveness of their own controls to ensure safety on construction sites.”

Latest news

Osborne staff start looking for new jobs

"Open to Work" flags appear on LinkedIn profiles
1 day ago

Plan rejected for 42-storey tower above historic building

Councillor describes as ludicrous plan to build 300 flats above Georgian mansion
2 days ago

Ventilation deal could hike product prices for contractors

Watchdogs at CMA launch probe after duct firm acquires rival
2 days ago

Tide gets go-ahead for London 412 student flats scheme

Volumetric developer secures planning for West Ealing project
1 day ago

Green light for £75m Friar Gate Goods Yard in Derby

Construction set to start this summer on revamp of historic buildings
1 day ago

Robertson to deliver £45m Newcastle NHS Trust works

Capital works will be focused on Freeman Hospital and the Royal Victoria Infirmary sites
1 day ago

Winners named for £2bn Healthy Homes framework

CHIC reveals line-up of over 40 firms for net zero and building safety works
2 days ago

Plan lodged for tallest skyscraper outside London

Developer Salboy submits plan for 76-storey Manchester resi tower
2 days ago

Curo starts £170m race for new homes framework

Bath housing association plans to build up to 300 homes a year
2 days ago

Gove approves major Cambridge North mixed-use scheme

Government backs controversial scheme of 424 flats and 600,000 sq ft of tech and lab space
2 days ago

Pontins holiday park to house Sizewell C builders

Suffolk holiday park to house 500 nuclear construction workers
2 days ago

Adrian Bloor targets 1,000 homes-a-year

Expansion plans after major investment into challenger house building business HarperCrewe
2 days ago

Housing firm fined £528,000 after cable strike

Maintenance workers given no information on underground services
3 days ago

Berkeley subbies face six weeks without payments

Introduction of new finance software means payment hiatus for suppliers
4 days ago

Pagabo reveals 56 winners of latest £1.6bn retrofit deal

Decarbonisation Solutions Framework launched: Full list of winners
3 days ago

Go-ahead for £100m Liverpool Love Lane flats

500-flat scheme will be built across four blocks in Vauxhall area of city
3 days ago

Unions win HS2 site access battle at Old Oak Common job

Skanska, Costain, Strabag JV now the last denying unions access to HS2 sites
3 days ago

Contractors jack 1,100t viaduct into place in 13-hour operation

158m-long composite deck structure jacked into place 10-hours ahead of schedule
3 days ago

Wates wins former Daily Mail printworks transformation

British Land advances major cultural venue at London’s Canada Water
4 days ago

Mace poaches Ramboll chief to be Head of Engineering

Martin Feakes will develop civil and structural engineering offer at Mace
4 days ago

Subcontractors form alliance for major civils jobs

Trio of specialists join forces to collaborate and offer Tier 1 contractors a turnkey solution
4 days ago

Fear of supply chain failures boosting collaboration

Procurement survey also reveals project bank account use is rising
4 days ago

Wates sets up business to target 160,000 mouldy social homes

Healthy Homes service will be offered to social landlords across England
5 days ago

Higgins wins £75m Peabody Passive House job

Latest phase of Deptford Landings to start construction
5 days ago

Contractors and unions agree Sizewell C working deal

New deal offers improved sick pay and parental leave over Hinkley Point deal
5 days ago

Competition chiefs win legal fight for more construction raids

High Court rules CMA officials can raid a domestic property as part of investigation
5 days ago

More Osborne companies file administration notices

Three more divisions lodge notices with court
6 days ago

McLaren wins multi-storey urban logistics contract

South London win with British Land is pioneering urban logistics hub
6 days ago

Big social housing schemes at risk over funding uncertainty

Housing associations warn uncertainty over public funding beyond 2026 is curbing new schemes
6 days ago

Kier wins Worcestershire town centre renewal

Firm secures Bromsgrove commercial and cultural hub project
5 days ago

Contractor services