Scaffold Fails and Fixes Episode 1: The “Ladder Stack” Disaster
It starts with one sentence:
“We just need a little more height.”
So someone grabs another ladder.
Maybe adds a plank.
Maybe balances it on uneven ground.
Now you don’t have access.
You have a liability.
Welcome to Episode 2 of Scaffold Fails & Fixes — where we break down real-world jobsite shortcuts and show the safer, smarter solution.
What Is a Ladder Stack?
A ladder stack happens when workers:
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Set a ladder on top of another surface to gain extra height
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Bridge planks between ladders
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Overextend beyond manufacturer limits
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Climb from unstable surface to unstable surface
It feels temporary.
It feels faster than setting scaffold.
But instability multiplies.
Every shift at the base transfers upward.
Every movement increases fall risk.
Why It’s a Disaster Waiting to Happen
1️⃣ Zero Structural Redundancy
Ladders aren’t designed to support platforms or secondary ladders.
2️⃣ No Guardrails
No fall protection. No perimeter safety.
3️⃣ Reduced Productivity
Workers move slower when they don’t feel stable.
Material handling becomes dangerous.
Trips up and down increase.
What looks like a shortcut often costs more time than doing it right.
The Real Cost
One fall can mean:
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Injury
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Workers’ comp claims
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OSHA citations
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Insurance increases
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Jobsite shutdowns
The price of “just a little more height” can be enormous.
The Fix
If the job requires extended reach, it requires proper access.
A professionally erected scaffold system provides:
✔ Stable working platform
✔ Guardrails
✔ Safe access points
✔ Room for tools and materials
✔ Compliance with safety standards
Shortcuts feel efficient.
Engineered access actually is.
Improvised setups shouldn’t be normal in professional construction.
Leadership shows in how you protect your crew.
Tomorrow on Scaffold Fails & Fixes:
Missing Guardrails — the most ignored hazard on jobsites.
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