
The addition of a digital‑construction champion and a seasoned safety assessor equips APS to accelerate safety‑by‑design initiatives and respond to evolving regulations, enhancing overall industry risk management.
Digital construction tools such as Building Information Modeling (BIM) and digital twins have reshaped how safety is planned and monitored on sites. By embedding hazard data directly into 3‑D models, project teams can identify risks before ground is broken, reducing incidents and insurance costs. Stefan Mordue’s decade‑long advocacy for these technologies, highlighted in his co‑authored BIM for Construction Health and Safety guide, positions him as a bridge between software innovators and frontline safety practitioners. Moreover, real‑time data analytics enable continuous monitoring, allowing corrective actions before incidents materialize.
The Association for Project Safety (APS) leverages board expertise to translate such innovations into practical standards. With Mordue’s digital insight and Stewart McArthur’s deep knowledge of Scottish regulations and warranty processes, the board can craft competency frameworks that align with both UK‑wide and jurisdiction‑specific safety requirements. The board will also advise on integrating AI-driven safety analytics, a topic Mordue has previously explored in CIOB guidance. This dual perspective supports APS’s mission to promote safety‑by‑design, ensuring that emerging technologies are adopted in a manner consistent with regulatory expectations.
For the broader construction sector, the board’s strengthened focus on digital safety promises measurable productivity gains and lower accident rates. Companies that integrate BIM‑based risk assessments early can streamline approvals, reduce rework, and demonstrate compliance to insurers and regulators. As APS disseminates these best practices through training and CPD programs, the industry moves toward a more resilient, data‑driven safety culture, positioning the UK as a leader in modern construction governance. Future projects are likely to embed safety metrics into contractual KPIs, further aligning financial incentives with risk reduction.
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