Walking and Working Surfaces INSY 3020 March 8 th, 2005 Adam Piper.

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Walking and Working Surfaces INSY 3020 March 8 th , 2005 Adam Piper

Transcript of Walking and Working Surfaces INSY 3020 March 8 th, 2005 Adam Piper.

Walking and Working Surfaces

INSY 3020

March 8th, 2005

Adam Piper

What kinds of Walking/Working Surfaces?

Floors and Aisles Openings, Holes, Vats and Pits Runways (Catwalks) Stairs Ladders Scaffolding

An Unfortunate Accident

A Florida maintenance worker at a warehouse was asked to repair a leaking roof

– The worker was allowed to hire a temp assistant

– He asked his 15 yr old neighbor to help

– They climbed onto this roof using this fixed ladder

An Unfortunate Accident (cont’d)

Spent 6 hours repairing the roof

Worked around these skylights

The roof is nearly 24 feet from the warehouse floor

An Unfortunate Accident (cont’d)

The 15 yr old neighbor fell through this skylight

He died from his injuries

This skylight was not guarded or protected by railings of any kind

An Unfortunate Accident (cont’d)

What can we do to prevent this kind of terrible tragedy?

What role should an Engineer play?

Injury Potential

Falls from height:– Walking surface failure - planking, scaffolding,

etc.– Accidental stepping where no walking surface

exists. Descending stairs and thinking your are at floor level

when you still have one step left.

Injury Potential (Cont’d)

Stepping into openings, people holes, etc. Stepping off loading docks and other

elevated surfaces - balconies, landings, etc., w/o guards.

Deliberate stepping or jumping where no walking surface exists, i.e. suicide.

Failures of guardrails and other restraining devices, such as safety harnesses.

Injury Potential (Cont’d)

Falls from ladders:– Improper use of ladders for purposes for which

they were not designed, i.e. braces, platforms, hoist supports, etc.

– Improper foot wear - cowboy boots, loafers, sandals, etc.

– Improper mounting or dismounting the ladder, including jumping off ladder and too rapid ascent, and descent. Keep hips between rails.

Injury Potential (Cont’d)

– Placing ladder on an unstable base - soft, muddy, greasy, uneven, etc.

– Hands-full climbing.– Failure to use safety belts.

Housekeeping

Did you know this was the LAW?– “All places of employment, passageways,

storerooms, and service rooms shall be kept clean and orderly and in a sanitary condition.”

Why does OSHA care if your workplace is cluttered, dusty or non-orderly?

Aisles

Permanent aisles and walkways should be clearly marked

Must be kept clear of obstacles Must be designed with adequate space for

the tasks they are used for– Forklift operation– People traffic– Emergency Egress (Life Safety Code)

Floor Loading

The rated load limits for a floor, mezzanine, platform, roof, etc. must be…– Determined by a structural professional – indicated on a permanent plate affixed in an

obvious place for that working surface

You must not allow loads above capacity, under any circumstances.

Floor & Wall Openings

Hatchways, ladderways, stairways, skylights, pits, manholes, chutes

Must prevent people and materials from falling through– Even if people can’t fit through the opening,

tools/materials still might Can have no more than 1 inch of open space without

some kind of cover/railing/etc. In lieu of a railing/cover, a permanent attendant to

ensure no one or nothing falls through is required

Stairs

Fixed stairs are required…– If regular travel from one level to another is

required– If daily travel is required to other levels that contain

harmful substances– If the daily carrying of equipment, materials or tools

is required Ladders can be used instead if the destination

is not another level but a tank, crane, platform, etc.

Stairs (cont’d)

Stairs must be designed according to strict guidelines– Rise / Tread Run (must have angle 30 - 50°)– Width– Treads on stairs/steps– Platforms / landings– Railings– Vertical Clearance– Shape (spiral, winding, etc.)

Ladders

Types of Ladders– Portable

Stepladders Extension Ladders Straight Ladders Wood, fiberglass, or

metal – different rules

– Fixed

Ladders (cont’d)

Requirements– Rungs (12” apart and 16” wide)– Ladder must reach 3 ft above the surface– Extension ladder sections must overlap 3 ft (more if more

than 36 ft long)– No stepladders can exceed 20 ft. high– If ladder tips over, it must be inspected– Must ascend and descend facing the ladder– If fixed ladders exceed 20 ft, must have a landing or

platform every 20 ft. (every 30 ft if a cage is present)

Ladders (cont’d)

– Pitch of a ladder: 75-90 degrees for portable

and fixed ladders. Portable - 4:1 ratio, one foot

out at the base for every four feet up.

– Fixed Ladders: 75-90 degrees. Clearance between the ladder

and the wall - seven inches. Rear clearance - 30 inches.

– Broken Ladders: Never used Immediately taken out of

service until repaired or replaced.

Scaffolding

Definition– “Any temporary elevated platform

and its supporting structure used for supporting workmen or materials or both. “

Very detailed regulations (33 pages)

Designed for 4x the intended load– May not exceed 1x that load

May not work during storms or high winds

Must remove from use and inspect/repair if there is any reason to suspect damage

Must be kept clean and free of clutter

Railings

Standard Railing– Top rail + mid rail + posts– 42” high (mid rail = 21” high)– Must withstand 200 lb of horizontal force– Used to guard openings or other places where people may fall– Posts can be no more than 8 ft apart (depending on situation, may

need to be 6 ft apart) Standard Toeboard

– ¼” from floor– 4” high– Keeps material from falling on people below and people from

sliding under mid rail and falling

Railings (cont’d)

Standard Stair Railing– Used when there is no wall next to the stairs– Similar to standard railing except in height

Only 30-34” high Standard Handrail

– Used when there is a wall next to the stairs– 3” from a wall, bracketed to wall every 8 ft

30-34” high When to use a standard rail or handrail…

– If there are 4 or more risers – At least one handrail on right side of enclosed stairs– A rail on each side of a stairway that is open– If stair width greater than 44 in., need a handrail on each enclosed side and a rail

on each open side– If stair width greater than 88 in., need an intermediate rail in the middle

Can you identify what is wrong in the following pictures?

Questions & Comments