On the 6th of April 2007 the
government introduced The new Construction (Design and Management) Regulations
which are designed to improve the general safety of construction sites and cut
down on the number of accidents experienced during construction projects.
This new set of regulations will
replace two predecessors - The CMD Regulations 1994 and The Construction
(Health Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1996. Any outdated regulations were
updated before the two sets were consolidated into a single new set of rules
and guidelines.
Despite advances in construction and
communication technology construction sites are still considered to be
unnecessarily dangerous working environments, with around one third of all
workplace fatalities occurring in construction and many thousands of injured
occurring during construction projects each year. These injuries and deaths
have a wide reaching significant impact with colleagues, family, and friends
and of course the unfortunate individual, not to mention the possible legal
implications for the construction company involved. To be professional you must
have quantity surveyor courses in rawalpindi
The primary aim of the new regulations
is to build construction health and safety into every stage of building
projects from start to finish. The regulations apply to everyone involved with
a construction project and stipulate that each must take account of health and
safety. This starts with the Client who commissions the construction works and
includes Designers, Principle Contractors, Contractors and Construction
Workers.
Another aim of the new regulations
is the discouragement and removal of all unnecessary red tape and bureaucracy
which are since as a major contributing factor in construction injuries and
fatalities. By eliminating hazards at the earliest stages of design and focusing
effort where it will be most effective the new regulations should allow for
more attention to be paid to important on site issues.
Whilst these benefits of the new CDM
regulations clearly apply to construction companies, construction workers and
other related professions, many of them also impact directly on clients who
either do their own small scale construction and maintenance work or contract
it out to others. All of them must have quantity surveyor
courses in rawalpindi. If a
person believes the new regulations do not affect them because they are not
involved in the construction industry then they are probably wrong. For
example, if the person has responsibility for any property that requires
occasional maintenance work then, as the Client, they are required to comply
with some very specific duties.
Within the new Construction (Design
and Management) Regulations a domestic client is defined as anyone who lives,
or will live in the premises where the construction work is carried out.
Although a domestic client does not have construction health and safety duties
under the CDM Regulations 2007 anyone employed by them on a construction
project will.
Other roles also have defined duties
under the new CDM regulations, for example:
Designers - this includes any person responsible for any part of the
design work such as Architects, Project Managers, quantity surveyor
courses in rawalpindi,
Engineers, Interior Designers or anyone else who is traditionally employed on
the design stage of a construction project as a "contractor".
Principal Contractor - this is the key duty holder responsible for including
health and safety compliance in the overall planning, effective management and
coordination of the construction phase.
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