TRF/Site Traffic/TBT-TRF-003
Pedestrian and Vehicle Segregation
Traffic Management › Site Traffic › Pedestrian and Vehicle Segregation
Pedestrian and Vehicle Segregation
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-TRF-003 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Pedestrian and vehicle segregation means physically separating the routes used by people on foot from those used by vehicles and plant.
- Struck-by incidents between vehicles and pedestrians are one of the top causes of fatal injury on UK construction sites.
- Physical barriers such as armco, jersey blocks, kerbed walkways, and Heras fencing provide the most effective separation.
- Painted lines, cones, and signs help but are not substitutes for solid physical barriers between traffic and pedestrians.
- Designated crossing points with clear sightlines allow pedestrians to cross vehicle routes safely under controlled conditions.
- The traffic management plan must show all pedestrian routes, vehicle routes, crossing points, and one-way systems on the site plan.
- Segregation must be reviewed and adapted as the site layout changes throughout each phase of the construction project.
- Delivery areas, loading bays, and plant working zones must be physically separated from pedestrian access routes.
- All site personnel must be inducted on the traffic management plan and the designated pedestrian routes before starting.
- Segregation is a shared responsibility — both pedestrians and plant operators must follow the designated routes at all times.
Why?
| Prevent fatal strikes | A pedestrian struck by a moving excavator or HGV has almost no chance of survival — physical barriers prevent contact. |
| Physical barriers work | Paint and cones are easily ignored or displaced — physical barriers force separation that cannot be casually breached. |
| Constant adaptation | As the site layout changes, pedestrian and vehicle routes must be redesigned — yesterday's safe route may cross today's haul road. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Plant and Pedestrian Segregation | Site Speed Limits and Route Planning |
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