Bright
Idea #7 Ironworkers' Box
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Anyone who has worked
with tools knows that working with your arms above
Awkward posture constructing concrete reinforcement
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your shoulders will
tire you out. If you've taken a COHP ergonomics training you can also
use the technical term for this hazard: holding your arms up is an awkward
posture. Workers who work overhead have more injuries to their shoulders
than those who don't.
Ironworkers on a Boston construction site were inserting 10 foot and 14
foot lengths of #11 rebar into holes in a slurry wall. The slurry wall
was seven feet above the rebar mat they were standing on.
These workers were
handling heavy rebar with arms over their heads for hours at a time, and
they were hurting.
Mike Huxley, Steward from Ironworkers Local 7, thought of a simple solution.
If his crew could stand on a stable surface a foot or two above the ground,
they would be able to handle the rebar at a height between their waists
and chests.
Mike got help from other stewards and foremen who met with researchers
in a COHP Health Trak committee. Bob Marshall, Acting Carpenters' Steward,
thought workers could use a box about two feet tall, with one step. He
suggested it should rest on plywood so workers can easily slide it along
as they insert the rebar.
Other ironworkers helped with the design. Yrvens Pauyo shared his ideas
on dimensions, so "I could hold the dowel on my shoulder instead of up
here" (above his head).
Ironworker Foreman Jeff Mayotte, Local 57, tried out a box with three
of his crew members, who gave feedback.
Laborers in Photo: Jim Munroe, Patrick Mulkerrin, Bartley O' Malley
from Local 223
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The Ironworkers'
Box is a wooden box, dimensions: 20" x 20" x 11". It has a rope handle
for carrying or sliding over rebar.
Carpenters constructed
the Box in their carpenter mill.
The Ironworkers' Box raises footing for ironworkers who insert rebar into
slurry walls seven feet above the lower rebar mat.
Other workers besides ironworkers can use the Box. The Laborers in the
photo at left used it when they had to work with their elbows over their
shoulders.
Bartley O'Malley,
member of Laborers Local 223, appreciated the Box. "That's a handy thing.
We could use some more."
The dimensions of this box were determined for the job that needed to
be done. You can change the dimensions to suit your needs. Minimum time
and effort were needed to build the box, with immediate payoff on comfort,
ability to get the job done, and reduction of risk for injury.
This box is too heavy for one person to carry safely. A crane should lift
it to the rebar mat, or two people can carry it. Once it's there, one
person can set it up so it's comfortable for the worker.
If workers need to handle materials that are long and heavy, like rebar,
they can use two boxes next to each other. For example, one ironworker
can hold up the end of the rebar dowel behind another ironworker who is
inserting the dowel into the wall.
Small supports like this box might have unlimited uses for uneven or unstable
surfaces on your construction site. But if you want your handy boxes to
stick around, don't let them be mistaken for useless scrap. Label them
to be saved!
Date:
March, 2002
This research was supported by a grant from the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health, through CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training.
For more information,
or to comment on this Bright Idea...
Phone: (978) 934-3351, E-mail: Scott_Fulmer@uml.edu
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