Abstract

Construction sites in Korea are the locus of many disasters and work-related illnesses, and construction workers are particularly likely to be exposed to serious disasters such as falls, collapses, and burial. At domestic construction sites, the concept of Design for Safety has been adopted from abroad, and current regulations are intended to secure the personnel safety at each site. However, current government guidelines and regulations are difficult to apply in the field, mainly because they do not clearly address work issues and safety management measures. The current safety review method depends too much on the subjective experience of site workers or managers. This study analyzes the step-by-step tasks required for more automated building information modeling (BIM)-based construction site safety management. An example BIM-based assessment of one specific construction site hazard, the risk of a worker fall, is carried out. In the risk analysis stage, all of the associated hazards are identified and the attendant risks are estimated and quantified. A broader risk rating methodology is derived based on the scenarios of each possible disaster at a construction site, and the hazards are extracted by defining the relationships between each building element based on the BIM information. The result is a risk rating methodology derived from a BIM-based risk assessment.

Highlights

  • Accidents in the Korean construction industry have been increasing in recent years, with deaths in the construction industry accounting for nearly half of all workplace deaths in the entire industrial sector (344 out of 730 total industrial deaths) [1]

  • When a worker works at a height of 2 m or more, the worker is considered to be exposed to a hazard and needs safety measures against a fall disaster

  • This study showed the results of building information modeling (BIM)-based risk assessment based on the representative disasters presented above

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Summary

Introduction

Accidents in the Korean construction industry have been increasing in recent years, with deaths in the construction industry accounting for nearly half of all workplace deaths in the entire industrial sector (344 out of 730 total industrial deaths) [1]. This means that the severity of disasters that occur at construction sites is higher than at other industrial sites. Specific risk assessments for potential construction disasters are mainly based on the experience and supervision of construction site managers

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