REALWorld Law

Construction

Health and safety

In this country, what are the main rules relating to health and safety on construction sites? Do these rules in any way relate to the use of the development after construction is completed?

UK - England and Wales UK - England and Wales

UK - England and Wales

In the UK, the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 is the single most important piece of legislation affecting health and safety in the workplace. There are also countless subordinate regulations that relate to safe plant and machinery in the workplace, the provision of protective clothing and equipment, training, supervision and the maintenance of a safe working environment, the control of hazardous substances, the control of major accident hazards and fire precautions and various other matters.

Statutory duties give rise to criminal liability; this means an offender can be prosecuted by the enforcement agencies and brought before the courts to answer alleged offences in addition to civil liability in tort (ie the law that addresses, and provides remedies for, civil wrongs not arising out of contractual obligations).

The most important health and safety regulations are the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015, commonly referred to as ‘the CDM Regulations’. These transpose, into UK law, European directives on the implementation of minimum requirements at temporary and mobile work sites and therefore include construction sites.

The CDM Regulations require two documents to be created: first, a ‘construction phase plan’ which needs to be maintained throughout the duration of the construction work on site (until completion of the project) and, second, a ‘health and safety file’. This plan needs to detail the health and safety arrangements on site for the project. The health and safety file’ needs to contain all information relating to the structure ‘as built’ and must be available to all future owners and occupiers and contractors who carry out work on the structure. It is, therefore, the more important of the two documents as it relates to use of the development after construction has been completed.

The regulations impose duties on clients procuring construction work to appoint a ‘principal designer’ (who performs a statutory health and safety management role) and a ‘principal contractor’ (almost always the main building contractor) for any project. The principal designer’s role is to co-ordinate all health and safety aspects of the project and, specifically, to create, update and then hand over the health and safety file (at completion). The principal contractor is responsible for the construction phase plan that details the rules regarding the site with guidance and directions to other contractors.

Amendments to the Building Regulations 2010 introduced by the Building Safety Act 2022 as part of the new building safety regime require the appointment of dutyholders (who may be the same dutyholders as those appointed under the CDM Regulations), who are responsible for ensuring that buildings are designed and built in accordance with the relevant building regulations. Where the building under construction is a higher-risk building (being a building over 18m or 7 storeys in height and containing at least two residential units), in addition to the more rigorous building control requirements to ensure compliance with building regulations, the principal designer and principal contractor have further duties, such as obligations to submit a report to the building safety regulator if a safety occurrence occurs – this will be something that affects the structural integrity or fire safety of the building to such a degree that might result in injury to or death of a significant number of people.

The Building Safety Act 2022 also introduces new requirements for higher-risk residential buildings during occupation, including the appointment of a competent Accountable Person to oversee the ongoing safety arrangements of an occupied higher-risk building and the maintenance of the golden thread of information, which is information created and collated during the construction phase, and used during occupation or when there are any further works to ensure the building remains safe and continues to comply with relevant building regulations.