Scaffold Adjacent to Public Areas

Toolbox Talk Record

Ref: TBT-SCF-017  |  Issue: 1  |  Date: March 2026
PresenterProject
LocationDate

What?

Why?

Public safetyMaterials falling from scaffolds onto pedestrians cause serious and fatal injuries — protection is non-negotiable.
Legal liabilityFailure to protect the public from scaffolding hazards exposes the contractor to prosecution and civil claims.
Access rightsPedestrians, wheelchair users, and the visually impaired have a legal right to safe passage past construction works.
Do Don't
  • Install fans, brick guards, and debris netting where the public passes below the scaffold
  • Obtain a licence from the local authority for scaffolds on or over the public highway
  • Erect hoarding at ground level to separate pedestrians from the scaffold base area
  • Provide accessible pedestrian diversions with signage and dropped kerbs for wheelchair access
  • Maintain a minimum 2.1 metres headroom clearance above any public walkway below the scaffold
  • Light the pedestrian route and scaffold hoarding adequately during hours of darkness
  • Inspect public protection measures daily and repair any damage or displacement promptly
  • Use banksmen and temporary footway closures during scaffold erection and dismantling
  • Ensure scaffold ties do not protrude over the public footway at head height
  • Brief scaffold users that the public is directly below and dropped objects are unacceptable
  • DON'T erect scaffolding over the public highway without a local authority licence
  • DON'T allow materials to be stored on scaffold platforms above public walkways unsecured
  • DON'T reduce headroom below 2.1 metres where the public walks beneath the scaffold
  • DON'T leave gaps in debris netting, fans, or brick guards above public areas
  • DON'T obstruct the pedestrian footway without providing an accessible signed diversion
  • DON'T throw materials from the scaffold where the public could be struck below
  • DON'T leave scaffold components protruding over the public footway at any height
  • DON'T erect or dismantle scaffolds during peak pedestrian hours without traffic management
  • DON'T leave hoarding or pedestrian diversions in poor condition with trip hazards
  • DON'T forget that scaffold protection is needed 24/7 — not just during working hours

See also: Scaffold Safety Awareness | Temporary Hoardings and Fencing