Why Pedestrian Segregation Matters on Construction Sites

Construction sites are among the most hazardous working environments in the UK. HSE fatality data consistently shows that being struck by a moving vehicle or falling object is among the most common causes of construction fatalities. Pedestrian segregation — physically separating people on foot from plant, vehicles and overhead work — is a primary control for both hazards.

Crowd control barriers, Heras fencing and other temporary barrier systems are the physical tools through which pedestrian exclusion zones are created, maintained and adapted as site work progresses. They are not optional — on notifiable CDM projects, segregation of pedestrians from plant and vehicles is a baseline expectation of the principal contractor's site management obligations.

The Legal Framework

The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 require principal contractors to plan, manage and monitor construction work so that it is, so far as reasonably practicable, carried out without risks to health and safety — including risks to members of the public and other pedestrians in and around the site. This requires active management of pedestrian exclusion zones throughout the construction phase.

The Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 and the Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 also contain provisions relevant to the safety of pedestrian routes in and around workplaces, including construction sites where they interface with the public.

Barrier Specifications

Crowd control barriers used on construction sites should meet the relevant specifications for their application:

The Deployment Risk: Manual Handling of Barriers

Here is the paradox of pedestrian barrier deployment on construction sites: the equipment that creates safety also creates a safety risk during its own deployment. Crowd control barriers — typically 12–14kg each, with a horizontal span of 2.3 metres — are awkward, heavy items that are traditionally handled individually by operatives walking along the deployment line.

The risk profile of barrier installation matches the MSDs statistics precisely: repetitive lifting of heavy awkward items, in potentially poor ground conditions, often under time pressure. A 200-barrier deployment involves 200 individual lifts, carries and placements.

The MW Equipment BarrierBag carries 144 crowd control barriers as a single mechanised load, handled by telehandler or excavator — eliminating the repetitive individual lifts that drive MSD risk. Deployment rate doubles from ~30/hour manual to 60–80/hour mechanised. Learn more about the BarrierBag →

Maintaining Barriers Throughout the Project

Pedestrian exclusion zones on active construction sites need to be adapted continuously as the work front progresses. This means barriers are relocated regularly — creating repeat deployment exposures for the operatives who move them. The cumulative manual handling exposure across a long construction programme is significant.

Mechanised barrier handling reduces this cumulative exposure by replacing individual manual carries with machine-assisted bulk repositioning — the same safety benefit as the initial deployment, applied every time the exclusion zone changes.