TG20 Compliance Guide: Using the eSP Tool to Generate Compliance Sheets for Tube and Fitting Scaffolds

Quick Answer: TG20:21 is the NASC's comprehensive guide to tube and fitting scaffolding, covering design, erection, and inspection. The free eSP (electronic Scaffold Planner) tool generates TG20 Compliance Sheets for standard configurations, confirming that a proposed scaffold falls within the scope of TG20 without requiring individual structural calculations. Non-standard configurations outside TG20 scope require a structural engineer's design.

Summary

TG20:21 (Technical Guidance document 20, 2021 edition) is the definitive UK reference document for tube and fitting scaffolding. Published by the NASC, it provides comprehensive guidance on the structural design and erection of tube and fitting scaffolds, replacing previous editions TG20:08 and TG20:13.

The TG20 system works on the principle that scaffolds falling within its defined parameters are pre-engineered — you don't need site-specific structural calculations if the configuration matches what TG20 has already proven safe. The eSP tool is the practical mechanism for confirming this: enter the configuration parameters, and the tool generates a Compliance Sheet confirming TG20 applicability or flagging that a structural design is needed.

This matters to scaffolding contractors because it reduces the cost and time of scaffold design — no engineer needed for the majority of standard scaffolds. It matters to principal contractors because a TG20 Compliance Sheet is clear documentary evidence that the scaffold has been checked against an established standard. For NASC members, generating Compliance Sheets is expected practice.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: TG20 Standard Configuration Limits

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Configuration Max Height Max Bay Width Max Lift Height Tie Pattern
Independent tied (close boarded) 50m 2.4m 2.0m To eSP output
Independent tied (general purpose) 50m 2.4m 2.0m To eSP output
Putlog 50m 2.4m 2.0m Wall ties as designed
Birdcage 8m 2.4m span 2.0m N/A (internal)
Truss-out Structural design required

Exact limits depend on duty class, wind zone, and specific configuration. Always run eSP for the specific parameters.

Detailed Guidance

How to Use the eSP Tool

The eSP tool is available free to all users (not just NASC members) at the NASC website. Steps:

  1. Log in / register — free registration required; firms can register multiple users
  2. Start new calculation — enter project reference, date, and contractor details
  3. Select scaffold type — independent tied, putlog, birdcage, or other
  4. Enter configuration parameters:
    • Facade height (m)
    • Bay width (m) — measured centre to centre of standards
    • Lift height (m) — bottom of boards to bottom of boards
    • Duty class (1–6 per BS EN 12811-1)
    • Number of board widths
    • Soil/ground conditions (assumed adequate by default)
    • Wind zone (eSP auto-populates from postcode)
    • Exposure category (sheltered, normal, exposed)
  5. Review results — eSP calculates whether the configuration is within TG20 scope and specifies the required tie pattern
  6. Generate Compliance Sheet — print or save PDF; the sheet shows all input parameters, the required tie pattern, and confirmation of TG20 scope

The Compliance Sheet references TG20:21 and is the documentary evidence that the scaffold has been designed to an accepted standard. It replaces an engineer's design certificate for standard configurations.

Understanding TG20 Tie Patterns

Ties are the critical element TG20 calculates — the Compliance Sheet will specify:

The tie pattern depends on facade height, bay width, lift height, duty class, and wind zone. A scaffold in a coastal or elevated location (Wind Zone 3) will require more ties than the same scaffold in a sheltered urban location (Wind Zone 1).

Common reasons eSP produces a "not in scope" result:

Non-Standard Scaffolds Requiring Structural Design

When eSP returns "not in scope", a structural design is required from a qualified structural engineer with scaffolding design experience. This is not optional — erecting a scaffold outside TG20 scope without a design is a serious compliance breach.

Common non-standard scenarios:

For non-standard designs, retain the engineer's calculations and design certificate in the scaffold register alongside the TG20 Compliance Sheet (if parts of the scaffold are standard).

Scaffold Duty Classes Explained

The duty class entered into eSP determines the design loading and therefore the required number of standards, board widths, and tie density. Classes per BS EN 12811-1:

Class Load (kN/m²) Typical Use
1 0.75 Inspection only, no materials
2 1.50 Light painting, rendering, inspection
3 2.00 Plastering, bricklaying (light)
4 3.00 Bricklaying, masonry, blockwork
5 4.50 Heavy masonry, concrete work
6 6.00 Exceptionally heavy loads

The agreed duty class must be recorded on the scaffold handover certificate. Clients and principal contractors must not load the scaffold above the agreed class without notifying the scaffolding contractor and potentially revising the design.

Wind Zones and Exposure Categories

TG20 uses UK wind zones based on the geographic location of the site:

Exposure category modifies Zone:

Getting the wind zone and exposure wrong will result in insufficient ties. Always check the postcode using eSP's built-in tool rather than estimating.

Retaining Compliance Sheets

TG20 Compliance Sheets should be:

During scaffolding inspections (which must occur at least every 7 days and after adverse weather), the inspector should confirm that the erected scaffold matches the parameters on the Compliance Sheet. Any deviation — a bay wider than specified, a tie omitted — must be rectified or a revised Compliance Sheet generated.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a TG20 Compliance Sheet a legal requirement?

No, it is not specifically required by legislation. However, the Work at Height Regulations 2005 require that scaffolds be designed by a competent person. Using the TG20 eSP tool and retaining the Compliance Sheet is the standard industry method of demonstrating that competence. In the event of an incident, a contractor who has not generated a Compliance Sheet and has no other design evidence will face serious difficulty demonstrating that the scaffold was properly designed.

Can I use TG20:13 Compliance Sheets from old projects?

No. TG20:21 supersedes TG20:13. Any new scaffold should be calculated using the TG20:21 eSP tool. Old Compliance Sheets from TG20:13 are not valid for new projects, though they remain valid documentary evidence for scaffolds erected under that edition at the time.

Does TG20 cover system scaffolds (Layher, Harsco, etc.)?

No. TG20 is specifically for tube and fitting scaffolds using steel tube to BS EN 39:2001 and couplings to BS EN 74-1:2005. System scaffolds (frame and brace, cuplock, ringlock, etc.) have their own proprietary design data and must be designed in accordance with the manufacturer's technical documentation and BS EN 12810.

What tube and coupler standards does TG20 require?

TG20 is based on:

Who can generate a TG20 Compliance Sheet?

Any registered eSP user can generate a Compliance Sheet. There is no requirement for the person generating it to hold a specific qualification, but the person responsible for the scaffold (typically the Scaffolding Supervisor or Contracts Manager) should verify that the input parameters are correct before the sheet is issued.

Regulations & Standards