CON/General/TBT-CON-001
Concrete Pour Safety
Concrete & Formwork › General › Concrete Pour Safety
Concrete Pour Safety
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-CON-001 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Concrete pours involve multiple hazards including chemical burns, manual handling, plant movements, and formwork failure.
- Wet concrete is highly alkalite (pH 12-13) and causes severe chemical burns to unprotected skin and eyes.
- Burns from wet concrete may not be felt immediately — damage continues even after apparent removal from skin.
- Concrete pumps operate under high pressure and the boom must be treated as a crane during placement.
- Formwork and falsework must be inspected and approved with a permit to load before any concrete is poured.
- The weight of wet concrete is approximately 2.4 tonnes per cubic metre — overloading formwork causes collapse.
- Concrete delivery vehicles are heavy and have restricted visibility — banksmen are required at all times.
- Vibration tools used to compact concrete can cause hand-arm vibration syndrome with prolonged daily use.
- Concrete washout must be contained and disposed of properly — it must never enter drains or watercourses.
- Communication between the pump operator, placing gang, and supervisor is critical throughout the pour.
Why?
| Prevent burns | Wet concrete causes severe alkali burns that destroy skin tissue — gloves and waterproof clothing are essential during all pours. |
| Prevent collapse | Formwork overloading or premature striking causes catastrophic structural collapse — permit to load is mandatory before pouring. |
| Protect the environment | Concrete washout is highly polluting — just one washout entering a watercourse can kill aquatic life for miles downstream. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Concrete Burns Prevention | Formwork Erection & Striking |
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