Falcon Crane Hire suffers second fatal accident in five months


By Ross Pearman

A crane belonging to Falcon Crane Hire has been involved in a collapse. The Jaso J138 luffing jib crane collapsed on a David Mclean site in central Liverpool, killing one site worker and trapping the operator in the cab.

Falcon was also the owner of the tower crane that collapsed in Battersea in September, killing two people.

In the latest incident, crane operator Barry Walker had to be released from the cab by the emergency services and was taken to hospital with back and shoulder injuries. As a joint Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and police investigation gets underway, disquiet is growing in the industry at the seemingly endless tally of crane incidents.

There has been speculation that high winds may have caused the collapse, but records from the nearby Liverpool Airport show a wind of just 15 knots (27.8km/h) at the time – far below the limit for crane operations. However, a Met Office official said local conditions around high-rise sites can be very different from those on an open airfield.

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Liverpool crane collapse, Liverpool Daily Post & EchoOne industry source also pointed out that if a luffing tower crane turns into the wind and raises its jib, the wind effect is substantially increased. "It also depends on what, if anything, the crane is lifting," our source said. "If it is something like formwork, the windage can be considerable."

The crane has been removed to the HSE’s laboratory in Derbyshire and Mike Wickham, managing director of David Mclean Contractors, said the company is co-operating with the investigation.

For its part, the HSE has renewed its warning that contractors and crane hire companies should follow the advice in its safety alert issued after the Battersea incident. No findings have been released about the cause of this incident yet as it remains a police investigation.

[Picture: Liverpool Daily Post & Echo]



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