- Obtain both a confined space permit and scaffold erection permit where required
- Design the scaffold to fit the confined space with adequate ties, bracing, and stability
- Monitor the atmosphere inside the confined area throughout scaffold erection
- Provide adequate lighting inside the confined area for all scaffold erection activities
- Use system scaffold components where their smaller size suits the restricted space
- Plan how materials will be delivered into the confined space through limited openings
- Ensure a rescue plan covers both fall-from-height and confined space scenarios
- Ventilate the confined area to maintain safe air quality during the scaffold build
- Brief scaffolders on the specific confined area hazards before they start erection
- Inspect the completed scaffold with particular attention to stability in the enclosed space
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- DON'T erect scaffold in a confined area without the required permits in place
- DON'T enter the confined space to erect scaffold without atmospheric monitoring
- DON'T force oversized components through restricted access openings — use suitable sizes
- DON'T skip confined space ventilation because scaffold erection seems routine
- DON'T compromise scaffold stability by omitting ties or bracing due to space constraints
- DON'T allow scaffold erection to block the confined space escape route
- DON'T leave scaffolders without communication to the surface team during erection
- DON'T assume a standard rescue plan covers a fall from scaffold inside a confined space
- DON'T overload the scaffold in a confined area where space limits load distribution
- DON'T ignore the combined risk — treat confined area scaffolding as a high-risk activity
See also: Scaffold Safety Awareness | Confined Space Entry Procedures
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