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Walking and Working Surfaces

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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 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Walking and Working Surfaces


1
Walking and Working Surfaces
  • INSY 3020
  • March 8th, 2005
  • Adam Piper

2
What kinds of Walking/Working Surfaces?
  • Floors and Aisles
  • Openings, Holes, Vats and Pits
  • Runways (Catwalks)
  • Stairs
  • Ladders
  • Scaffolding

3
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

4
An Unfortunate Accident (contd)
  • Spent 6 hours repairing the roof
  • Worked around these skylights
  • The roof is nearly 24 feet from the warehouse
    floor

5
An Unfortunate Accident (contd)
  • 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

6
An Unfortunate Accident (contd)
7
What can we do to prevent this kind of terrible
tragedy?
What role should an Engineer play?
8
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.

9
Injury Potential (Contd)
  • 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.

10
Injury Potential (Contd)
  • 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.

11
Injury Potential (Contd)
  • Placing ladder on an unstable base - soft, muddy,
    greasy, uneven, etc.
  • Hands-full climbing.
  • Failure to use safety belts.

12
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?

13
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)

14
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.

15
Floor Wall Openings
  • Hatchways, ladderways, stairways, skylights,
    pits, manholes, chutes
  • Must prevent people and materials from falling
    through
  • Even if people cant 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

16
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.

17
Stairs (contd)
  • 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.)

18
Ladders
  • Types of Ladders
  • Portable
  • Stepladders
  • Extension Ladders
  • Straight Ladders
  • Wood, fiberglass, or metal different rules
  • Fixed

19
Ladders (contd)
  • 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)

20
Ladders (contd)
  • Pitch of a ladder
  • 75-90 degrees for portable and fixed ladders.
  • Portable - 41 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.

21
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

22
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

23
Railings (contd)
  • 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

24
Can you identify what is wrong in the following
pictures?
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