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December 16, 2013

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Prosecution after five roofers injured in steel collapse at school

 

A Worcestershire construction company has been ordered to pay fines and costs of more than £200,000 after five roofing contractors were seriously injured when a heavy steel canopy for a new secondary school collapsed.
 
The workers sustained injuries ranging from fractures and broken bones to cuts and bruising following a 13-metre plunge at the Abraham Darby Academy in Madeley, Telford, on 25 August 2011.
 
Droitwich-based Adstone Construction Ltd was prosecuted last Friday (13 December) by the HSE after an investigation identified failings with the steelwork that gave way.
Shrewsbury Crown Court heard that key pieces of the canopy truss steelwork were insufficiently welded together. As a result when the roofing contractors added further materials to the roof, key welds failed and the structure collapsed — taking the roofers with it and causing enormous damage to the front of the new school.
 
The collapsed canopy was 57 metres long and weighed in at over 40 tonnes. A large vertical steel support column for the canopy, called the ‘skylon’ also collapsed as a direct result of the canopy failure.
 
HSE found Adstone Construction Ltd, which was responsible for the structure, had failed to provide adequate instructions to those responsible for the fabrication and welding of the canopy truss, and failed to adequately inspect the completed work.€ᄄ
 
The five workers’ injuries were detailed by the HSE, as follows: 
 
  • Philip Drury Jr, 29, from Mansfield, was airlifted to hospital strapped to a spinal board and in a neck brace. He was discharged after two days with damage diagnosed to two vertebrae and his shoulder.
  • Mark Drury-Tuck, 32, who lives in Ripley, was taken by ambulance to hospital where he was kept in overnight for observation. He was left with pain in his ribs.
  • Joshua Wolak, 24, from Edwinstowe, was kept in hospital overnight with a suspected fractured rib and multiple cuts and bruises.
  • James Buchanan, 32, also from Edwinstowe, suffered arm injuries and swelling and bruising to his neck. He had to wear a neck brace for the two days he spent in hospital, and needed ultrasound scans and x-rays.
  • Philip Drury Sr, 54, from Mansfield, had a fractured ankle, three cracked ribs with internal bruising, head injuries and cuts and bruising to his face and head.
  • Adstone Construction Ltd, of Wassage Way, Hampton Lovett Industrial Estate, Droitwich, was fined a total of £100,000 and ordered to pay £106,098 in costs after pleading guilty to breaching Section 3 (1) of the HSWA 1974.
 
Speaking after the hearing, HSE inspector Andrew Bowker, said: “This incident had enormous potential for loss of life. The canopy collapsed suddenly and violently without warning taking the five roofers that were on it down over 13 metres to the ground on what can only be described as a terror ride. It is a miracle that they were not more seriously injured or even killed.
 
“Other construction workers had been working directly under the school canopy for most of the day installing windows in the new school. Fortunately they were not under the canopy when it collapsed.
 
“Adstone Construction Ltd fabricated the steelwork for the canopy and failed to ensure that critical welds within the design of the steel truss were completed to the required specification and size.
 
“This failure led the canopy to collapse as more roofing material was added.
 
“It is vital that companies carrying out this type of work have suitable and sufficient quality control measures in place in order to ensure that the structural integrity of the new building is never in question.”
 
Speaking to SHP he added: “An important lesson to be learnt from this incident is about the importance of quality control regarding welds, and ensuring the correct design, specifiation and size of suitable welds’. 

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Bob Kennedy
Bob Kennedy
10 years ago

PPP from an engineering perspective.

How does such a fabrication leave the workshop without having had weld checks undertaken? What are their procedures and who failed to observe a basic requirement?

Do they receive poor SHEQ advice, or none at all, or was it ignored?

CDM worked well again? The designers failed to ensure that checks were made as well as the fabricators.

I wonder what excuse the CDMC had prepared?

Not down to me, perhaps?