Why Good Design Matters More Than Project Management

Why Engineering Design Matters More Than Project Management

Lessons from Tailings Dam Failures in the Global Mining Industry

In engineering-led industries such as mining, construction, and heavy manufacturing, project management is often seen as the key to success โ€” on time, on budget, and on scope.

However, history shows that when failures occur, they are rarely caused by poor project management alone.

Some of the most serious industrial failures in the world โ€” including tailings dam collapses โ€” demonstrate a critical truth:

Project management cannot compensate for poor or marginal engineering design.

At Hamilton By Design, we believe design sets the safety ceiling. Project management operates within it.


Project Management Executes โ€” Design Determines Risk

Project management is essential. It coordinates people, schedules, procurement, and delivery. But it does not:

  • Increase a structureโ€™s factor of safety
  • Prevent liquefaction
  • Change material behaviour
  • Improve drainage capacity
  • Create resilience to abnormal conditions

Those outcomes are locked in at the design stage.

If a system requires perfect execution to remain safe, then the design is already fragile.

Good engineering design assumes:

  • Humans make mistakes
  • Weather exceeds forecasts
  • Equipment fails
  • Maintenance is imperfect

And it builds in margin, redundancy, and tolerance accordingly.


Tailings Dam Failures: A Clear Engineering Example

Tailings dam failures provide one of the clearest illustrations of the difference between design responsibility and project management responsibility.

Post-failure investigations across multiple countries consistently show that:

  • Many failed dams were operating as intended
  • Rainfall events were often within design assumptions
  • Operators followed approved procedures
  • Warning signs existed but reflected systemic weakness, not isolated mistakes

The common thread was not poor scheduling or cost control โ€” it was design philosophy.

Typical design-level issues identified:

  • Excess water retained in tailings
  • Low-density slurry disposal
  • Marginal stability under normal variability
  • Reliance on operational controls to maintain safety
  • Legacy designs never upgraded to match increased production

When a dam fails after a rainfall event, the rain is usually the trigger โ€” not the root cause.


Why Design Must Be Forgiving of Operations

Engineering design should be robust, not optimistic.

A safe design is one where:

  • Small operational deviations do not create instability
  • Water balance can tolerate extreme events
  • Safety does not depend on constant intervention
  • Failure modes are slow, visible, and recoverable

When operators or project managers are forced to โ€œmanage aroundโ€ design weaknesses, risk accumulates silently.

If safety relies on perfect behaviour, the system is unsafe by design.


The Australian Perspective: Design First, Then Manage

Australiaโ€™s generally strong tailings safety record reflects a broader engineering mindset:

  • Conservative design assumptions
  • Strong emphasis on water recovery and thickened tailings
  • Avoidance of high-risk construction methods
  • Independent engineering review
  • Design-for-closure thinking

Project management remains critical โ€” but it is not asked to compensate for marginal engineering.

This philosophy extends beyond tailings dams into:

  • Bulk materials handling
  • Structural steelwork
  • Brownfield upgrades
  • Shutdown-critical fabrication
  • Plant modifications

What This Means for Mining and Industrial Projects

The lesson is simple but powerful:

Engineering design controls risk.
Project management controls delivery.

When design is done properly:

  • Project management becomes easier
  • Variability is absorbed safely
  • Failures become unlikely rather than inevitable

When design is compromised:

  • Project management is left managing risk it cannot remove
  • The system becomes fragile
  • Incidents become a matter of when, not if

Our Approach at Hamilton By Design

At Hamilton By Design, we work from the principle that:

  • Design must be defensible
  • Assumptions must be explicit
  • Failure modes must be understood
  • Engineering judgement must lead delivery

Whether weโ€™re supporting:

  • Mining infrastructure
  • Tailings-adjacent plant systems
  • Bulk materials handling
  • Brownfield modifications
  • Shutdown-critical upgrades

We prioritise engineering-led design decisions that reduce reliance on operational heroics.


Final Thought

Project management is essential โ€” but it should never be asked to solve problems that only engineering design can prevent.

The safest projects are not the best managed ones โ€”
they are the best designed ones.

Hamilton By Design logo displayed on a blue tilted rectangle with a grey gradient background

Talk to an Engineer First

If your project involves:

  • High-risk infrastructure
  • Brownfield modifications
  • Water-sensitive systems
  • Shutdown-critical works

Get engineering involved early.
Contact Hamilton By Design to discuss an engineering-led approach that reduces risk before construction begins or Be part of the discussion.

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