AS 3990 Mechanical Equipment Steelwork | Walkways, Platforms & Conveyor Structures

Engineer using LiDAR scanner to capture as-built tank steelwork, transitioning to compliant AS 3990 walkways and access platforms

AS 3990 โ€“ Mechanical Equipment Steelwork

Walkways, Conveyor Structures, Platforms and Gantries

Mechanical equipment steelwork is everywhere in industrial sites โ€” conveyor structures, access walkways, maintenance platforms, gantries and support frames. Over time, these structures are modified, loaded differently, repaired, and upgraded. Thatโ€™s where AS 3990 โ€“ Mechanical equipment โ€“ Steelwork becomes critical: it provides a framework for designing and verifying steelwork that supports mechanical equipment and associated access systems.

At Hamilton By Design, we help asset owners and project teams reduce risk by converting real as-built steelwork into engineering-grade digital models that can be checked, upgraded, and documented with confidence.


3D LiDAR scanning of industrial tank steelwork showing as-built condition and engineered walkways and stairs designed to AS 3990

When AS 3990 Steelwork Becomes a Problem in the Real World

Steelwork rarely fails because it was โ€œobviously wrongโ€ on day one. The most common issues develop gradually due to changes in loading, upgrades, corrosion, or incomplete documentation.

Common triggers we see on site

  • New conveyor drives, chutes, skirts, guards, or pull-wire systems added after commissioning
  • Extra services added: cable trays, hose reels, water lines, pipework, and supports
  • Walkway changes for access, maintenance, or guarding upgrades
  • Localised damage from impact, vibration, or operational fatigue
  • Corrosion or section loss in wash-down areas, coastal environments, or chemical exposure zones
  • Legacy steelwork with missing drawings or unknown load assumptions

If you canโ€™t prove what exists (accurately), it becomes difficult to prove compliance, fitness-for-purpose, or due diligence.


Key Engineering Risks with Walkways, Platforms, Gantries and Conveyor Structures

1) Design intent vs as-built reality

Many sites have steelwork that differs from drawings due to shutdown modifications or brownfield constraints. Small deviations in member size, connection detailing, or geometry can materially change structural performance.

2) Loads have changed โ€” but the steelwork didnโ€™t

A โ€œsimpleโ€ modification can add significant load: added services, heavier equipment, changed maintenance practices, or multiple personnel working in the same bay. These changes can push members or connections beyond the original assumptions.

3) Conveyor vibration and dynamic effects

Conveyor structures experience cyclic loading, start/stop effects, and vibration. Even if the structure looks acceptable, fatigue and resonance can become a long-term reliability problem โ€” particularly around drive stations, transfer points, and cantilevered platforms.

4) Connection adequacy often governs

Field-welded brackets, modified gussets, bolt slip, corroded fasteners, and non-standard connection geometry can become the weak link. Connection performance is frequently the true limiting factor in older or heavily modified steelwork.

5) Access and safety interfaces

Walkways and platforms often sit at the intersection of multiple requirements: safe access geometry, handrails, toe-boards, gates, and guarding. If access steelwork was modified without a proper verification step, the risk becomes both structural and safety-related.


What โ€œVerificationโ€ Looks Like in Practice

AS 3990 steelwork compliance is not just a box-tick. In a practical project environment, it means you can answer:

  • What steelwork exists right now (as-built)?
  • What loads and operational conditions apply today (not ten years ago)?
  • Are members and connections adequate under realistic scenarios?
  • What upgrades are required, and can they be fabricated to fit first time?
  • Can the asset owner document compliance and risk controls for governance?

Hamilton By Design supports this process by bringing LiDAR scanning + mechanical engineering + fabrication-ready outputs together under one roof.


How Hamilton By Design Helps (Our Typical Deliverables)

1) Engineering-grade 3D LiDAR scanning of steelwork

We capture accurate geometry of:

  • Walkways and access platforms
  • Conveyor stringers, trestles, and transfer towers
  • Gantries, monorails, and maintenance frames
  • Supports, bracing, ladders, stairs, and access interfaces

Related service:
3D Laser Scanning: https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/3d-laser-scanning/

2) As-built CAD model for verification and design

We convert the scan into usable engineering outputs such as:

  • As-built 3D CAD models
  • Key dimensions, levels, and clearances
  • Interference checking and fit-up planning
  • Fabrication-ready drawings for retrofit steelwork

3) Engineering checks and upgrade design

Where required, we support structural verification and upgrade design using engineering workflows suited to brownfield assets.

Related capability:
SolidWorks FEA / simulation workflows: https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/home/solidworks/solidworks-fea-simulation/


Where This Matters Most (Typical Applications)

  • Conveyor upgrades and transfer station modifications
  • Walkway widening, new stair access, and maintenance platform additions
  • Guarding upgrades, pull-wire additions, and access compliance programs
  • Corrosion repairs and local strengthening
  • Brownfield plant modifications with limited shutdown time
  • Audit readiness and engineering documentation clean-up

If youโ€™re working around conveyors, you may also find this relevant:
AS 1755 Conveyor Safety: https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/as-1755-conveyor-safety/

And for safety leadership context:
Machine guarding lessons: https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/machine-guarding-in-australia-a-decade-of-lessons-for-leaders-asset-owners-and-engineers/


Standards and Compliance Context (How AS 3990 Fits In)

AS 3990 typically sits alongside a broader compliance context depending on the asset and scope. In many industrial environments, it may interact with standards and guidance such as:

  • AS 1657 (fixed platforms, walkways, stairways and ladders)
  • AS 4100 (steel structures)
  • AS/NZS 1170 (structural actions / loading)
  • AS 1755 (conveyor safety and associated interfaces)

For official sources and governance context:

(Note: Always confirm the current revision and applicability of standards for your site, scope, and jurisdiction.)


Why Digital As-Built Matters for AS 3990 Steelwork

A verified as-built model reduces:

  • Upgrade risk and fabrication rework
  • Shutdown time lost to unexpected clashes
  • Safety risks from undocumented modifications
  • Compliance gaps during audits and governance reviews

It also supports โ€œfit-first-timeโ€ fabrication because designers, engineers, and fabricators are working from the same geometry โ€” not assumptions.


Talk to an Engineer About Your AS 3990 Steelwork

If youโ€™re planning an upgrade, responding to an audit, or unsure whether existing walkways, platforms, gantries or conveyor structures still meet their intended duty, we can help you quickly establish a reliable baseline.

Start with scanning, modelling, and engineering verification โ€” and build from facts.

Related service pages to explore:

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Structural Engineers

Structural Engineers for Industrial and Mining Projects

Structural steel I-beam bolted connection with column in isometric view.

Hamilton By Design provides structural engineering support for industrial facilities, mining operations, and heavy infrastructure across Australia. We work in complex, high-risk environments where accuracy matters โ€” brownfield sites, operating plants, shutdown windows, and projects that must be buildable the first time.

Our approach combines practical structural engineering with digital capture and modelling workflows to reduce uncertainty, minimise rework, and help projects move from site conditions to fabrication-ready outcomes with confidence.


A 3D laser scanner on a tripod capturing an industrial plant structure, with a colourful point cloud and blue CAD wireframe overlay illustrating engineering-grade 3D laser scanning accuracy.

3D LiDAR scanning and 3D modelling service button โ€” laser scanner capturing a point cloud for engineering and CAD modelling
Mechanical engineering services

Structural Engineering Services

We support asset owners, EPCs, maintenance teams, and fabricators with structural engineering services including:

  • Structural design and upgrade packages for plant modifications, support steelwork, access platforms, and equipment foundations
  • Structural assessments and verification for existing assets, including fit-for-purpose checks and load capacity reviews
  • Brownfield integration and retrofit design, accounting for existing geometry, constraints, and constructability
  • Connection detailing and design intent, supporting practical fabrication and installation sequencing
  • Compliance-aligned engineering documentation, suitable for procurement, fabrication, and site installation
  • Engineering support for shutdowns, upgrades, and maintenance-driven scope where time and accuracy are critical

If you need broader capability beyond structural work, view our full service offering here:
https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/engineering-services/


Where Structural Engineers Add Value in Industrial Sites

Industrial and mining environments create structural challenges that differ from greenfield construction. Common drivers include:

  • Uncertain existing conditions (missing drawings, undocumented changes, deformation over time)
  • High operational loads, vibration exposure, and fatigue risk
  • Space constraints and access limitations in operating plants
  • Safety and compliance obligations for access systems, platforms, and guarding interfaces
  • Tight installation windows during shutdowns โ€” where rework is not an option

Hamilton By Design supports these conditions with structural design methods that are grounded in constructability and site realities, not just theoretical models.


Scan-to-Engineering Workflows for Structural Accuracy

Structural engineering outcomes improve dramatically when design is based on accurate existing conditions. Where appropriate, we integrate engineering-grade 3D scanning and modelling so that structural solutions fit first time.

This workflow supports:

  • Accurate member locations and interface checks
  • Clearance verification for equipment and access structures
  • Retrofit designs that align with existing steelwork and foundations
  • Reduced site clashes and fewer fabrication changes

Learn more about our scanning capability here:
https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/home/3d-lidar-scanning-digital-quality-assurance/3d-laser-scanning/


Drafting and Fabrication-Ready Documentation

Structural work only delivers value when it can be fabricated and installed cleanly. Hamilton By Design produces documentation that supports workshop and site teams, including:

  • GA drawings and layout plans
  • Fabrication drawings and installation details
  • BOM support (where required)
  • As-built updates based on verified site data

Explore drafting support here:
https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/engineering-services/services-drafting-lidar-scanning/


Structural Analysis and Verification

For projects involving modification, unusual loads, vibration concerns, or uncertainty around existing asset performance, we can support analysis and verification pathways to reduce risk and improve decision-making.

Our capability includes engineering checks that align with mechanical and structural project needs. If analysis is part of your scope, you can also review our assessment services here:
https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/finite-element-analysis-fea-mechanical-assessment/


Typical Structural Engineering Applications

Hamilton By Design frequently supports structural engineering across:

  • Mining and process plants (CHPPs, conveyors, transfer stations, access systems)
  • Industrial facilities and workshops (equipment supports, platforms, structural modifications)
  • Brownfield upgrades where new equipment must integrate with existing structures
  • Safety improvements such as walkways, stairs, handrails, guarding supports, and maintenance access
  • Foundation and support modifications for mechanical equipment upgrades and plant change-outs

For mining-specific engineering support, see:
https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/mechanical-engineering-mining-industry-australia/


Why Work With Hamilton By Design

Clients engage Hamilton By Design when they need structural engineering that is:

  • Practical and buildable โ€” designed for fabrication and installation reality
  • Accurate โ€” supported by digital site capture where needed
  • Integrated โ€” structural work aligned with mechanical interfaces and plant constraints
  • Responsive โ€” suited to shutdown-driven and time-critical scopes
  • Single-source accountable โ€” engineering, modelling, and drafting in one workflow

See examples of outcomes delivered across real projects here:
https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/case-studies-hamilton-by-design/


Talk to a Structural Engineer

If you are planning a plant upgrade, safety improvement, retrofit, or structural assessment, Hamilton By Design can support your project from site conditions through to fabrication-ready documentation.

Visit our Engineering Services hub to get started:
https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/engineering-services/

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Our clients:

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Would you like us to arrange a phone consultation for you?
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