Concrete Form & Shoring Accidents

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Subin Law and the former Subin Associates.

Concrete work depends on temporary structures designed to hold enormous weight during pouring and curing. Formwork and shoring systems are built for specific loads, installed to precise specifications, and must remain stable throughout a process that cannot be stopped. When these systems fail, they do so without warning and with catastrophic force.

Subin Law represents workers seriously injured in concrete form and shoring accidents in New York. These cases are built around a specific chain of responsibility: who designed the system, who installed it, who was responsible for monitoring it, and where in that chain the failure occurred.

How These Accidents Happen

Concrete forms and shoring systems are under their greatest stress during a pour, when wet concrete exerts enormous lateral and downward pressure on the surrounding structure. A system improperly designed for the load, installed with defective components, or removed before the concrete has cured can fail suddenly and completely.

Workers in the area are struck by collapsing formwork, buried by shifting concrete, or injured when partially set structures give way under them. Exposed hardware from incomplete form stripping, including ties, nails, and anchors left in active work areas, creates hazards for workers moving through the site after a pour. Each failure traces back to decisions made in planning and execution, not to unforeseeable events.

Legal Responsibility

New York law assigns considerable responsibility to those who own and control construction sites to protect workers from gravity-related risks, including falling formwork, collapsing shoring systems and uncontrolled concrete movement. That responsibility is not passed on to subcontractors or workers on the ground. Legal requirements governing concrete formwork, reshoring procedures, and material handling during and after the pouring create obligations for those who manage these operations.

When those obligations are not met, and a worker is injured, the legal question focuses on who designed the system, who installed it, who was responsible for monitoring it, and where the breakdown occurred. Where an engineering firm’s design was deficient, its role in the failure must be examined. Where a subcontractor’s installation was negligent, its responsibility must be addressed alongside that of those who controlled the overall site.

Building the Case

Concrete form accident claims require a detailed investigation of how the system was designed, installed and monitored as well as conditions at the time of failure. This means reviewing construction plans, load calculations, inspection records, the sequence of work leading before the incident, and the credentials of those responsible for designing and certifying the system.

Collapsed formwork is typically removed quickly after an incident, and physical evidence can disappear within hours. Early involvement is essential to preserve structural evidence, document site conditions, and secure engineering records before they become hard to obtain. Every case at Subin Law is built for trial from the start. In technically complex cases like these, that preparation allows liability to be established against every responsible party.

What These Cases Involve

Concrete form and shoring failures cause crush injuries, fractures, traumatic brain injury, spinal damage, and fatalities. The force involved in a formwork collapse or concrete shift leaves workers little ability to protect themselves once the failure begins.

Workers’ compensation can provide initial coverage. Where property owners, general contractors, subcontractors or engineering firms bear responsibility under applicable laws, additional civil claims may allow recovery for losses beyond what the workers’ compensation system provides, including long-term earnings, future care and other damages.

Subin Law takes a limited number of serious cases so each receives focused attention and a strategy built around its specific facts. Consultations are free and confidential. No attorney fees are charged unless compensation is recovered.

Contact Subin Law to discuss your case.

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