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Fitting Room Construction SWMS

Construction of retail fitting rooms / change rooms including stud-wall framing, plasterboard install, mirror mounting, curtain track or door install, bench seat install, lighting fit-off, ventilation grille install.

βš–οΈWHS Regulation 2025 & Codes of Practice β€” legally binding from 1 July 2026 (s26A)
πŸ‘·Reviewed by certified occupational health and safety professionals
πŸ—ΊοΈState-specific variants for all 8 Australian jurisdictions
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SWMS variants reference your state’s WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.

Fitting Room Construction covers the construction of fitting rooms in retail premises β€” building the fitting room partitions, joinery, mirrors and fixtures as part of a shop fit-out. It is fit-out construction work, and the hazards are the manual handling of the heavy fitting rooms components, the fixing into masonry with its silica and dust, any electrical fit-off, the power tools, and the work in occupied or trading premises. This document is written on the basis that fitting room construction is carried out with the manual-handling, silica, electrical and occupied-premises controls in place.

Fitting Room Construction is carried out as construction work in connection with the manual handling and construction requirements, with the heavy fitting rooms components handled safely, the fixing into masonry and any silica controlled, any electrical fit-off carried out by a licensed electrician, and the occupied premises managed. The manual handling, the silica, any electrical, and the occupied premises are the considerations. This document coordinates the manual-handling, silica, electrical and occupied-premises controls so the fitting rooms is installed safely.

Hazards identified

9 hazards covered, sorted by priority.

Manual handling of heavy fitting rooms componentsHIGH

Musculoskeletal and crush injury handling the heavy fitting rooms components

Silica and dust fixing into masonryMEDIUM

Silica and dust exposure fixing into masonry and cutting

Mirrors and glass in the fitting roomsMEDIUM

Lacerations and breakage from the mirrors and glass

Electrical fit-off where applicableHIGH

Electric shock from any electrical fit-off

Working in occupied or trading premisesMEDIUM

Injury to and from the public and occupants in trading premises

Power tools and plantMEDIUM

Injury from the power tools and plant

Fixing and securing the installationMEDIUM

Injury and failure from inadequate fixing

Awkward postures during installationMEDIUM

Musculoskeletal injury from awkward postures

Sharp edges, fixings and offcutsMEDIUM

Lacerations from sharp edges, fixings and offcuts

Control measures

Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β†’ substitution β†’ isolation β†’ engineering β†’ administrative β†’ PPE.

  1. 1Engineering: use mechanical aids and team lifting for the heavy and awkward cabinets, joinery, panels, glass, fixtures and equipment, and manage the manual-handling and awkward-posture hazard with correct technique and the hierarchy of controls for hazardous manual tasks.
  2. 2Engineering: control respirable crystalline silica and dust from drilling, cutting or grinding masonry, concrete, tiles, fibre-cement or stone at the source β€” on-tool dust extraction or water suppression β€” never dry-cutting uncontrolled, with respiratory protection, recognising the workplace exposure standard for silica reduces on 1 December 2026.
  3. 3Administrative: manage the mirrors and glass in the fitting rooms to AS 1288, with care and the correct glass.
  4. 4Administrative: have any electrical fit-off carried out by a licensed electrician under isolation.
  5. 5Administrative: manage the work in occupied, trading or public premises by segregating the work area from the public and occupants with barriers and signage, working out of hours where required, and protecting customers, occupants and the public from the work.
  6. 6Engineering: use the power tools and plant β€” saws, drills, nail guns, routers and grinders β€” safely to the plant requirements and the manufacturer's instructions, with guarding in place and the tools maintained.
  7. 7Engineering: fix and secure the installation so it is stable, and manage the awkward postures and sharp edges, fixings and offcuts.
  8. 8Administrative: all workers must hold a valid White Card (General Construction Induction Training, CPCCWHS1001), with the trade, electrical, gas and other competencies required for the work, and any shopping centre or building induction.
  9. 9Administrative: conduct a pre-start toolbox talk covering the day's work, identified hazards, the occupied-premises and public-proximity arrangements, required PPE and emergency procedures, and record attendance in the consultation section.
  10. 10Administrative: consult workers and any health and safety representatives on the work and its risks, record the consultation, and keep this document available at the workplace.
  11. 11PPE: eye protection to AS/NZS 1337.1, hearing protection where required, gloves appropriate to the task, and Class I or Class II safety footwear with protective toecap to AS/NZS 2210.3.
  12. 12Administrative: review and update this SWMS whenever the work scope changes, after any incident or near miss, when a worker or health and safety representative raises a concern, when new hazards are identified, or at minimum every 12 months.
  13. 13Administrative: confirm the work is completed safely, the installations are secure, the electrical and services are safe, and the premises are left clean and safe.

Applicable Codes of Practice

Code of Practice: Hazardous manual tasksβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

The control of the manual handling and awkward postures of the fit-out, including cabinets, joinery, glass and fixtures.

Code of Practice: Managing the risks of respirable crystalline silica (model guidance)βš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

The control of respirable crystalline silica from drilling and cutting masonry, tiles, fibre-cement and stone.

Code of Practice: Construction workβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

The general construction work duties for the fit-out, including the SWMS and principal contractor duties.

Code of Practice: Managing electrical risks in the workplaceβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

The control of electrical risks, including isolation, working near services, and the use of licensed electricians.

AS 1288 β€” Glass in buildings: Selection and installation

The selection and installation of glass in the display walls, cabinets, doors and shopfronts.

Who this is for

  • β†’Shop fitters installing fitting rooms.
  • β†’Joinery and shop fitting contractors.
  • β†’Retail and commercial fit-out businesses.
  • β†’Builders and PCBUs requiring fitting rooms installation.
  • β†’PCBU safety managers and supervisors coordinating the manual-handling, silica and electrical controls.

What you receive

  • βœ“Editable Microsoft Word document (.docx) fully compatible with Microsoft Word 2016 and newer, Google Docs, and LibreOffice Writer.
  • βœ“Title page with editable fields for PCBU name, ABN, site or premises address, project name, principal contractor details, and document revision date.
  • βœ“Hazard register with the fitting room construction hazards β€” each with a documented consequence, inherent risk rating on a 5x5 likelihood-consequence matrix, hierarchy-of-control measures, and residual risk rating.
  • βœ“Fitting Room Construction prompts referencing the hazardous manual tasks and silica Codes of Practice, a manual-handling section, a silica and fixing section, and an electrical and occupied-premises record.
  • βœ“Licensing and competency prompts for the fit-out, and for any electrical, gas or plumbing work carried out by the appropriately licensed trade, with a work-at-height and plant pre-use checklist where relevant.
  • βœ“Worker consultation record per the model WHS Act consultation duty and a worker sign-on register (blank, expandable).
  • βœ“Applicable legislation and Codes of Practice schedule pre-populated for the model WHS jurisdiction with a state-variance reference table covering the harmonised states, plus Victoria.
  • βœ“Emergency procedure template and a revision log.

Worked example

Shop fitters are engaged to install fitting rooms in a fit-out. The heavy fitting rooms components are handled with mechanical aids and team lifting. Silica and dust from fixing into masonry and cutting are controlled at the source with on-tool dust extraction or water suppression, never dry-cutting uncontrolled, with respiratory protection, recognising the silica exposure standard reduces on 1 December 2026. Any electrical fit-off is carried out by a licensed electrician under isolation. The occupied or trading premises are managed by segregating the work area from the public. The power tools and plant are used safely. The installation is fixed and secured so it is stable, and the awkward postures and sharp edges managed. The fitting rooms is installed, the electrical confirmed safe where applicable, and the records retained.

Related legislation

  • Model Work Health and Safety Act β€” primary duty of care; the duty to consult workers; the reckless-conduct offence; and notifiable-incident provisions, as enacted in each jurisdiction.
  • Model Work Health and Safety Regulations β€” the construction work, falls, electrical, hazardous manual tasks and plant provisions, and the Section 291 high risk construction work and SWMS duties where applicable, as enacted in each jurisdiction.
  • The construction work, falls, electrical and hazardous chemicals Codes of Practice, and the relevant standards such as AS 1288 for glass, AS/NZS 5601.2 for commercial catering gas and AS/NZS 3000 for wiring, are called up by the relevant safety legislation for the fit-out.
  • Electrical work is carried out by a licensed electrician, gas work by a licensed gasfitter, and plumbing work by a licensed plumber, under each state and territory's licensing schemes; work in shopping centres and occupied buildings is also subject to the centre or building rules.
  • Victoria operates under the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 and the Occupational Health and Safety Regulations 2017, with the construction, falls, electrical and high risk construction work provisions applying in place of the model instruments.

Frequently asked questions

What are the main hazards installing fitting rooms?

The hazards are the manual handling of the heavy fitting rooms components, the fixing into masonry with its silica and dust, any electrical fit-off, the power tools, and the work in occupied or trading premises. These are managed with the manual-handling, silica, electrical and occupied-premises controls.

What is the silica hazard?

Fixing into masonry and cutting releases respirable crystalline silica, which causes silicosis, so it is controlled at the source with on-tool dust extraction or water suppression, never dry-cutting uncontrolled, recognising the silica exposure standard reduces on 1 December 2026. The silica from cutting and fixing into masonry is a key hazard in the fit-out.

Who carries out the electrical work?

Any electrical fit-off is carried out by a licensed electrician under isolation, because it is electrical work. The electrical fit-off is carried out by the appropriate licensed electrician.

How is the installation secured?

The installation is fixed and secured so it is stable, because an inadequately fixed installation can fail, and the awkward postures and sharp edges managed. Fixing and securing the installation ensures it is stable and safe to use.

Who installs fitting rooms?

Fitting Room Construction is carried out by shop fitters in connection with the manual handling and construction requirements, with the manual-handling, silica, electrical and occupied-premises controls, and electrical work by a licensed electrician. The fitting rooms is installed and the electrical confirmed safe where applicable.

What's in this SWMS

Document details

Regulation
WHS Regulation 2025, Schedule 1 β€” High Risk Construction Work
HRCW Category
Manual handling, power tools, partition work
Hazards Identified
7 hazards with controls
Format
Editable DOCX (Microsoft Word)
Author
Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH)
Delivery
Instant download after payment