In mid June of 2012 Karl attended a meeting in Hamilton held in conjunction with Placemakers and the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment at that time known as the DOL. Karl attended the meeting as he owned a small building business in Hamilton employing 2 staff and felt it necessary to hear what changes were on the horizon for us as builders as we had been informed by our trade rep tha
t it was a very important meeting that would deliver a major change within the industry. He was not sure what to expect at the meeting but assumed it would be something of a pre warning regarding a change to some legislation down the track or something to that effect. What a shock it was to hear that we had two weeks to prepare for a Working Safely at Height campaign in which the ministry was to issue prohibition notices and instant fines for non compliance! Something we had been doing as builders for years had finally come to an end and we were no longer allowed to stand on the top plate and work on the roof framing, nor were we allowed to work off ladders for a prolonged period of time etc etc and look out if we were caught doing any of these things more than once! This was met with mass disapproval from the crowd of angry builders and to be honest, at that time Karl was one of them because what the Ministry had done was give us a huge problem to solve with absolutely no offer of a solution.
“Read this pamphlet" they said, "its all in there” and that was that. Karl remembers getting home and thinking, “man that was pretty intense, I hope that takes a while to come into effect”. A week later the roofer who was to carry out a job on the alteration he was doing at the time refused to do the job until we had “edge protection” in place. “What the hell is edge protection?” was Karls reply and he went on to explain that they had been ordered off a site recently and made to erect scaffolding around the perimeter of the work platform before commencing further works. This is when Karl realised it was a serious issue and that the industry was changing whether we liked it or not. Karl called in a scaffold company who seemed to know exactly what they were supposed to do as far as this new fangled edge protection idea was concerned and they charged a small fortune for the privilege too! Karl got to thinking that there has got to be a better way of doing this and went for a drive around the subdivisions to see what Joe average builder was doing about the problem. Half the guys out there were doing nothing and the rest had scaffolding up around the roof edge so Karl asked around and a few guys had been ordered down from the roof and told to get edge protection before going back. Back at home he got his little booklet out, read through it to find that yes it was indeed all in there, and these guys were serious alright. Looking out the window over breakfast at the neighbors alteration which had edge protection scaffolding all around it with poles down to the ground and bracing poles over to Karl's section basically in the way of any further exterior building progress until the roof was completed, he thought about a better system and whether a bracket would work in place of all the poles. Karl did a few sketches before taking some measurements and welding up his first prototype out of box section steel and screwing it to the underside of the soffit framing next door. It looked ugly but also looked like it would work with a bit of fine tuning and the more he thought about it the more he realised that there was a whole industry of residential builders out there scrambling for a solution to the issue of Working Safely at Height. Karl got on the internet and found a local company called Stainless Design Limited that looked like they were in the position to help him develop his idea into a saleable product and gave them a call. He took his prototype down along with a full scale timber model of a soffit section to show a typical detail and working with the design team some weeks later after having determined the correct New Zealand Standard to comply with, and spending numerous hours studying it and covering all aspects of material, dimensional, and installation requirements finally had a real prototype bracket that looked like a viable solution. This was of course just the beginning but he saw the potential steadily growing and the coming weeks saw the establishment of Edge Protection New Zealand Limited as a limited liability company as well as meetings with patent attorneys to protect his design and IP as well as readying the EBRACKET® for a full static and dynamic test with a registered engineer in attendance to get the product compliant and ready for sale. Karls main objective with the “EBRACKET®” as it has been branded was to be able to provide a product that was not only a practical solution for builders and roofers but also one that is as versatile as possible to fit as many different applications as possible and present the least amount of inconvenience to the end user without compromising on quality or safety. They employed laser cutting techniques for accuracy and efficiency and this enabled them to be able to stack the EBRACKETS® on top of each other for easy transportation and storage which no other system can claim. They ensured the safety rail mounting points were within the limitations of the NZ/AS Standard in all instances the EBRACKET® would be employed and chose powder coated mild steel for strength and durability in the work environment in safety yellow to signify the products safety oriented purpose. Karl constructed a test rig to simulate a house roof and they conducted their first tests without the registered engineer to iron out any weaknesses etc. Minor changes were made and they tested the EBRACKET® in August of 2012 with great success and gained their compliance certificate from McDowall Structures. "We sold our first set of EBRACKETS® shortly thereafter and since then, we have gone on to refine the original EBRACKET® to include three variants able to accept both SG8 4x2 timber as well as standard galv or aluminium scaffold tube for the safety rails proving popular with builders, roofers and scaffolders New Zealand wide. To date we have sold more than 2000 EBRACKETS® between Whangarei and Invercargill and have received nothing but positive feedback from our customers". Their main EBRACKET® fits onto the soffit bearer/sprocket on standard soffits as well as the gable end on the outrigger and top truss chord on monopitch roofs. Another is designed for top chord mounting on sloped soffits or where the soffit bearer is not available as it was found that builders in the South Island did not build their soffit framing until after the roof was on. Edge Protection New Zealand Ltd provide a full set of instructions with every set of EBRACKETS® sold and have also developed their own Task Analysis example outlining how to employ the hierarchy of controls to ensure the building processes carried out at height to get a single storey residential roof erected safely are followed by everyone on site. "We pass this information on to anyone who is interested through various trade breakfasts that I attend as well as contact through our website and trade shows such as the National Safety Show which we had a stand at recently to engage with industry professionals and collect feedback for future developments which include brackets for existing roofs and commercial applications. We are committed to the future of safe working practices in the building industry and have become Partners in action with MoBIE to keep us updated with any developments. MoBIE keeps a copy of our test certificate on file and accepts our system as a practical and compliant solution to the issue of working safely at height in NZ"
Sometimes the best ideas are the simplest ones!