ConstructionSWMS

Steel Erection SWMS

Steel erection combines two of the highest-risk construction activities — working at height and structural assembly — making it one of the most hazardous phases of any building project. The WHS Regulation 2025 classifies steel erection as high risk construction work under both the height and structural alteration categories, requiring a documented SWMS before work begins. Falls during steel connection, dropped loads, temporary structural instability, and wind exposure are the primary fatality mechanisms. This template covers erection sequence planning, temporary bracing, fall prevention, and crane coordination with controls mapped to binding codes of practice effective 1 July 2026.

Legal Requirements

regulation

WHS Regulation 2025 Part 4.4 — High Risk Construction Work

hrcw category

Work at height >2 m; structural alteration requiring temporary support

code of practice

Managing the Risk of Falls at Workplaces + Construction Work (both binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)

section 26a binding

Yes — effective 1 July 2026. Non-compliance is admissible as evidence of breach.

hrwl required

Crane operation (various classes); rigging (various classes); scaffold >4 m

Hazards

HazardConsequenceLikelihood
Falls from height during steel member connection and bolt-upDeath, spinal injuriesLikely
Dropped steel member or fitting striking workers belowDeath, traumatic crush injuriesPossible
Temporary structural instability before permanent bracing is installedProgressive structural collapse, multiple fatalitiesUnlikely
Wind loading on partially erected steel frame causing member displacementCollapse, falls, struck-by injuriesPossible
Crane-steel collision or uncontrolled load swing during liftingStructural damage, worker strike, crane tip-overPossible
Pinch and crush injuries during member alignment and boltingFinger/hand amputation, crush injuriesLikely

Controls (Hierarchy of Controls)

Develop and follow an engineer-approved erection sequence plan specifying the order of member placement and temporary bracing requirements
Install temporary bracing immediately after each steel member is placed — never release crane load until bracing is secured
Deploy safety nets below connection points or require full body harness with twin-tail lanyard and 15 kN rated anchor points
Coordinate all crane lifts with a detailed lift plan including load weights, crane capacity, rigging configuration, and communication protocols
Establish and enforce wind speed limits — cease steel erection above 40 km/h or as specified by engineer for the structure
Implement exclusion zones below active erection areas to prevent struck-by injuries from dropped objects
Require all riggers and crane operators to hold current high risk work licences appropriate to the task
Conduct daily pre-start inspections of all rigging equipment, harnesses, lanyards, and anchor systems

Recent Prosecutions

Steel erection fall fatality (NSW)$280,000

Steel erector fell 8 metres while connecting beam to column. No safety net, no harness anchor point provided, and no SWMS on site. Company had previous warnings for fall protection non-compliance.

2023SafeWork NSW Steel Erection Enforcement Reports

Structural collapse during erection (QLD)$200,000

Partially erected steel frame collapsed in moderate wind due to missing temporary bracing. Three workers injured. Investigation found erection sequence plan was not followed and bracing was deferred to save time.

2024Workplace Health and Safety Queensland Prosecution Database

What Your SWMS Must Include

Engineer-approved erection sequence plan with temporary bracing requirements at each stage
Fall prevention and arrest systems specific to each connection task — nets, harness anchor points, travel restraint
Crane lift plan with load charts, rigging configuration, and communication protocols
Wind speed monitoring procedure and cease-work thresholds for the specific structure
HRWL verification records for all crane operators, riggers, and scaffold erectors on site

Related SWMS

Working At HeightsCrane OperationsFormwork

Need a compliant Steel Erection SWMS?

Our WHS consultants develop steel erection SWMS with erection sequence plans, crane lift coordination, and fall prevention systems that satisfy regulator expectations and protect your ironworkers.

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