Design Risk Management: Contribution to Health and Safety

Front Cover
John Wiley & Sons, Feb 19, 2010 - Technology & Engineering - 176 pages
The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2007 (CDM Regulations 2007) is a revision of a major piece of legislation within the wide portfolio of construction-related legislation. It seeks to improve the long term health and safety performance of the UK construction industry, with ownership of health and safety proactively undertaken by the integrated project team.

Good design has always embraced health and safety issues and design teams remain essential players as well as key contributors and communicators in matters of health and safety management. Designers have a legal responsibility to ensure that their designs account for health and safety at all stages within the holistic envelope of construction.

Design Risk Management: Contribution to Health and Safety gives detailed guidance to construction practitioners with design responsibility on how to identify and manage health and safety risks, and on the design strategies to be followed. It seeks to focus on accountability with due emphasis on the minimisation of unnecessary bureaucracy and offers documentation trails that provide an insight to managing risk and not paperwork. Subsequently it offers a process by which designers can discharge their duties in compliance with the CDM Regulations.

Other editions - View all

About the author (2010)

Stuart D. Summerhayes is a chartered civil engineer and Registered Fellow of the Association for Project Safety. After an early period in heavy civil engineering he spent an extensive period in the university sector delivering construction related under-graduate and post-graduate courses. He is now managing director of SYNERGY CMC Ltd , which delivers two APS accredited courses, namely The Management of CDM Co-Ordination and Design Risk Management. Both of these courses offer routes onto APS Registers which are acknowledged by the HSE as a measure of competence for the respective duty holder.

Bibliographic information