Introduction to this document

Risk assessment - general building maintenance

General building maintenance activities can present risks to staff which, left unmanaged, could cause accidents and potentially put you on the wrong side of the law.

Managing the risks

To ensure this doesn’t happen, complete a risk assessment for general building maintenance activities which identifies all “significant” hazards and appropriate “reasonable” ways of reducing risks to an acceptable level.

To help you identify the hazards associated with building maintenance activities and the appropriate ways of controlling them, use our example Risk Assessment - General Building Maintenance. It covers the generic hazards associated with this type of activity and suggests control measures to reduce risks to an acceptable level.

Note. This risk assessment only deals with general building maintenance activities and is generic in nature.

Each job will be different and present different hazards that need to be controlled, so you should prepare a separate risk assessment for each one. You can do this by either adding to this generic assessment or by preparing a separate assessment altogether.

You should ensure that your document only addresses “significant” hazards, i.e. any that could and, more importantly are likely to, cause an accident or injury.

 

Make your instructions clear

Don’t include activities in your document that simply don’t need to be there. Work to the principle that if there is any chance of your staff being unaware of the safe way of doing something, then you will need to make it clear in your document. Finally, always ensure that any control measures you identify and follow are decided upon the principle of “so far as is reasonably practicable”.  

Note. The list of potential hazards is not exhaustive. However, for your risk assessment to be considered suitable and sufficient in the eyes of the law it must accurately reflect the “significant” hazards founding building maintenance work.