Blogs
History of Fall Protection: Evolving Construction Safety
Working at height has always been one of the most dangerous parts of construction.
Long before modern safety standards existed, workers climbed scaffolding, steel structures, ladders, and rooftops with little more than balance and experience protecting them. Falls were common, and serious injuries were often considered just part of the job.
Over time, the construction industry realized that productivity means nothing if workers are not protected. That shift led to the development of modern fall
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May 28th 2026
History of Coupling Pins, Couplers, and Clamps
Every scaffold system depends on connection points.
Frames, braces, and platforms may get most of the attention, but none of them function properly without the components designed to hold everything securely together. Coupling pins, couplers, and clamps are some of the most overlooked parts of scaffolding, yet they play one of the biggest roles in structural stability and safety.
A scaffold system is only as reliable as its connections.
Early Scaffolding Relied on Rope and Improvisation
The ear
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May 14th 2026
The History of Bracing and Screw Jacks: A Guide
Bracing and Screw Jacks: The Components That Keep Scaffolding Stable
When people think about scaffolding, they usually picture frames, platforms, and guardrails.
What they often do not think about are the components working quietly in the background to keep the entire structure stable. Bracing and screw jacks may not be the most visible parts of a scaffold system, but they are some of the most important.
Without proper support and leveling, even well-built scaffolding can become unsafe, ineffici
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May 12th 2026
Scaffolding Safety minute : Access points
If You Can’t Get On Safely, You Shouldn’t Be On It
Let’s start with something simple that somehow gets ignored every single day on jobsites:
If your crew can’t access the scaffold safely… they shouldn’t be on it.
Not “be careful.” Not “watch your step.”
They shouldn’t be on it. Period.
Because access isn’t just a convenience—it’s part of the system. And when it’s missing or done wrong, you’ve a
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Apr 16th 2026
Scaffolding Safety Minute: Tie-ins and anchoring
What’s Really Holding Your Scaffold Up?
Let me ask you something most people don’t stop and think about:
What’s actually holding your scaffold up?
Because it’s not just sitting there, minding its business.
It’s relying—completely—on proper tie-ins and anchoring to stay where it’s supposed to.
And when that part gets rushed, skipped, or done halfway?
You’re not dealing with “maybe a problem.”
You’re dealing with a collapse th
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Apr 15th 2026