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Safety Knowledge Hub

The latest in Canadian construction safety, regulations, and industry best practices.

A construction site in Vancouver with ground control zone tape visible in the foreground. Photo: SafeBuild Canada
Case StudiesMarch 25, 2026 · 11 min read

What the Oakridge Park fatality tells every Canadian construction site about crane safety

On February 21, 2024, a worker named Yuridia Flores was standing at the base of a tower crane at Vancouver's Oakridge Park development when a concrete forming mould fell 26 storeys and struck her. She was 41 years old, a mother of two, and she had not r

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Canadian construction safety officer reviewing a digital inspection checklist on a tablet at an active construction site with a Canadian flag and tower crane in the background
Safety Software AppsMarch 23, 2026 · 12 min read

Construction safety software in Canada: what to look for and which platforms are worth your time

Canadian construction recorded 183 fatalities in 2022, the highest of any sector in the country, according to data compiled by the Association of Workers' Compensation Boards of Canada. That number has not moved as quickly as it should.

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Understand the difference between Type 1 and Type 2 hard hats under CSA Z94.1, Ontario's minimum requirements, and why Canada's largest contractors are mandating Type 2 in 2026.
Equipment & GearMarch 20, 2026 · 10 min read

Type 1 vs. Type 2 hard hats in Canada: What CSA Z94.1 requires and why the industry is moving on

For most of the last two decades, the hard hat debate on Canadian construction sites has been a quiet one. Type 1 helmets met the legal minimum, workers wore them without question, and the industry moved on. That is starting to change, and the shift is

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Site supervisor and general contractor reviewing a construction site safety plan binder at a large active Canadian construction project
Site ManagementMarch 16, 2026 · 19 min read

How to build a construction site safety plan in Canada

Most construction site safety plans in Canada share the same flaw: they were written once, filed in a binder, and never looked at again. The plan exists. Workers do not know what is in it. Supervisors have not reviewed it since the project started.

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