Most safety zone marking in Perth plants is technically present and practically useless.
Harsh, sure, but I’ve walked enough factory floors to know the pattern: faded tape that used to mean something, signs mounted where nobody ever looks, and “exclusion zones” that get casually ignored because they block the shortest path to the next job. If your markings don’t change behaviour, they’re decoration.
And yes, you can be compliant on paper and still be unsafe in real life.
So what counts as a “clear boundary” anyway?
Clear boundaries do three jobs at once:
- They tell people where they are. (Pedestrian route? forklift lane? restricted area?)
- They tell people what the rules are. (PPE? authorisation? isolation required?)
- They physically stop mistakes when a painted line isn’t enough.
If you’ve only done one of those, you’ve done a third of the work.
For businesses reviewing their Perth manufacturing facility hazard and safety zones, this is the simple test: if your boundary only communicates one thing, it’s not doing enough.
One-line reality check: The boundary is only as good as the moment someone’s in a hurry.
Start with hazards, not tape: a site-wide assessment that isn’t fluffy
Here’s the thing, plants often start by buying floor tape colours and then reverse-engineering meanings later. That’s backwards. Start with the hazard profile, then decide what the boundary should look like.
A proper hazard assessment for zone definition should map:
– Processes (what happens here, not what the layout drawing says happens)
– Machinery and energy sources (kinetic, electrical, hydraulic, pneumatic, thermal)
– Traffic and movement (forklifts, pallet jacks, pedestrians, contractors, deliveries)
– Exposure duration (2 minutes passing through isn’t the same as 6 hours stationed there)
– Crew footprint (how many people cluster here when work piles up?)
Now, this won’t apply to everyone, but if your assessment doesn’t explicitly address traffic conflict points (blind corners, doorways, aisle merges), you’re undercooking it.
Document each zone with a purpose statement. Write it like it’ll be read during an incident, because it might be.
Identify hazard zones: perimeters and access points (where things actually go wrong)
Access points aren’t administrative details. They’re where rule-breaking happens.
Doors, roller shutters, aisle mouths, gates between bays, the gap next to the racking that “everyone uses”… those are your true control points. Marking a perfect exclusion rectangle on the floor means nothing if there’s an unmarked side entry where people drift in.
In my experience, plants do better when they define zones based on how people move, not how the CAD drawing looks. Watch a shift change. Watch a breakdown response. Watch a contractor find the crib room. That’s the real workflow.
Short and blunt: If you can’t see the boundary at the speed of walking, it’s not a boundary.
Floor markings, signage, barriers: pick the right tool (and stop pretending one is enough)
Floor markings: the daily-driver control
Floor markings are for routine movement, lanes, waiting boxes, pedestrian walkways, “keep clear” areas, staging zones, forklift exclusion bands.
They must survive reality: scissor lifts, sweepers, oil mist, fork tynes, wash-downs, and abrasive dust. If you’re re-taping every month, you didn’t choose a marking system, you chose a recurring task.
A practical rule I use: If the hazard can hurt someone even when they’re “just passing through,” don’t rely on paint alone.
Signage: useful only when it’s seen at the moment of decision
Signs work when they’re placed where the decision occurs, not where there’s spare wall space. That means at:
– entrances to restricted zones
– line-of-sight approach points (before the hazard, not beside it)
– isolation locations and controls
– PPE pick-up points
– emergency equipment stations
Signage should be legible under your lighting, glare, and dust conditions. If you’ve never checked visibility with a loaded trolley in front of it… you’re guessing.
Physical barriers: the honest control
Barriers are what you use when you’re tired of negotiating with human nature.
Guardrail, bollards, mesh fencing, interlocked gates, swing gates, whatever matches the risk and the flow. The barrier should deter entry without creating new hazards (trip points, pinch points, blocked egress).
Look, I’m opinionated on this: if your risk assessment says “restricted access,” and your control is a line of tape, you don’t have restricted access.
A Perth-ready marking plan (the part nobody wants to write)
You need a plan that lives on the floor, not in a shared drive.
Make it visual. Make it local. Put it where people actually stand and look: reception, safety boards, crib rooms, high-traffic work areas, maintenance bays. Keep versions controlled so “the old map” doesn’t keep circulating for years.
Include:
– a zone map that mirrors actual facility flow
– a legend that’s consistent (colour + pattern + meaning)
– key responsibilities (who owns updates, who approves changes)
– revision log and last review date
– emergency response cues: evacuation routes, muster points, isolation points
– visitor/contractor guidance (because they won’t know your shorthand)
One-line paragraph, because it matters:
Good plans reduce hesitation.
And hesitation is what turns a manageable incident into a messy one.
Visibility standards: not just “big enough,” but readable under real conditions
You can’t hand-wave “visibility.” It’s measurable.
A commonly referenced measure for sign legibility is that viewing distance in metres is roughly 200× the letter height in metres (or, put simply, bigger letters for longer distances). But you also need contrast, lighting, and placement that matches sightlines.
If you want one hard data point: Safe Work Australia reports that body stressing and falls remain among the leading mechanisms of workplace injury, and poor layout/controls contributes to both through congestion, awkward access, and rushed movement. Source: Safe Work Australia, Key Work Health and Safety Statistics, Australia (latest annual release).
That’s not saying “signage fixes it.” It’s saying layout discipline, including clear marking, directly supports safer movement.
Auditing: the only time your markings tell the truth
Audits shouldn’t be grand events. They should be frequent, slightly annoying, and brutally honest.
A decent hazard zone audit checks:
– line clarity (fading, wear, patch repairs, peeling)
– consistency (same zone type marked the same way everywhere)
– obstruction (pallets hiding signs, bins parked in walkways)
– barrier integrity (impact damage, missing fixings, bent rails)
– access control effectiveness (do people respect it? if not, why?)
– emergency readiness (exits, isolation points, extinguishers unobstructed)
Keep audit records simple: finding, risk level, owner, due date, closeout evidence. If it takes two hours to write up, people will quietly stop doing it.
And yes, review after changes. New machine, new workflow, new shift pattern, seasonal labour bump, layout tweak. Your zones should move with reality.
Training that doesn’t bore people into ignoring it
Training has one job: make zone meanings automatic.
Not theoretical. Automatic.
I’ve seen short, scenario-based refreshers outperform full “annual compliance training” by a mile. Five minutes at pre-start, one scenario, one reminder:
– “This red hashed area is not overflow storage.”
– “If you cross this barrier, isolation applies, call supervisor.”
– “Forklift lane means no walking, even if the forklift isn’t there right now.”
Don’t overcomplicate. Repetition beats complexity.
The question to ask yourself (and it stings a bit)
If a brand-new contractor walked in right now, could they navigate your floor without being verbally coached every ten metres?
If the answer is no, your marking system is being propped up by tribal knowledge, and tribal knowledge disappears the moment the wrong person is absent.
Fix the boundaries. Make them visible. Back them with barriers when the risk demands it. Then audit like you actually expect the plant to change, because it will.
Categories: Business