Scaffold
Scaffold: a temporary elevated work platform used in construction. Explained for Australian builders including HRCW triggers and HRW licence requirements.
Ask Chalkline about this →A scaffold is a temporary elevated work platform erected on a construction site to provide safe access and working positions at height. Scaffolding is used for tasks including external wall cladding, brickwork, render, roofing, and gutter work where a ladder is impractical or unsafe.
Also known as: scaffolding, tube-and-coupler scaffold, modular scaffold, system scaffold.
Category: WHS / Working at heights
Under Australian WHS law, any scaffold work where a person could fall more than 2 m is High-Risk Construction Work (HRCW) and requires a Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) before work starts. Erecting, altering, or dismantling a scaffold with a platform fall height over 4 m requires a High-Risk Work (HRW) scaffold licence (basic, intermediate, or advanced depending on scaffold type and height). Scaffolding work must be carried out by, or under the direct supervision of, a licensed scaffolder for systems above that threshold (Safe Work Australia, verified 2026-05-10).
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Last updated: 2026-05-10. Verified: 2026-05-10. Quarterly review for currency.