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 structureโs 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 โmanage 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
Australiaโs 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 weโre 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.

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.

