
What is Safety Zones Line Marking?
Safety zones line marking involves creating clearly defined floor areas that communicate different safety requirements, access restrictions, or hazard levels. This includes pedestrian-only zones separated from vehicles, PPE requirement zones, dangerous goods storage areas, emergency assembly points, exclusion zones around hazardous machinery, quarantine areas, and buffer zones around loading docks. Colour-coded boundaries instantly communicate safety rules and access requirements.
Key Benefits
Physical boundaries prevent unauthorized access
Colour-coded zones communicate rules instantly
Reduces incident rates in multi-hazard facilities
Organizes PPE requirements by location
Emergency assembly points clearly identified
Dangerous goods storage zones meet compliance
Visitor safety zones isolate untrained personnel
Durable materials withstand industrial environments

Site Inspection
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Professional Marking
Expert application with premium materials
Quality Assurance
Final inspection and compliance sign-off
Compliance Standards
Safety Colour Coding for Zones
AS 1319:1994 Specifies colours for different zone types: red for danger/restricted areas, yellow for caution zones, blue for mandatory zones, green for safe areas.
Workplace Health & Safety Requirements
Work Health & Safety Act 2011, Safe Work Australia Code of Practice Employers must identify hazard areas, implement controls to prevent exposure, and clearly demarcate zones with different risk levels.
Dangerous Goods Storage Segregation
AS 1940:2017 (flammable liquids), AS 3780:2008 (dangerous goods) Hazardous materials require physically separated storage zones clearly marked to prevent incompatible substances being stored together.
Pedestrian & Vehicle Segregation Zones
Safe Work Australia Guidelines Industrial facilities must maintain clear separation between areas where pedestrians work and zones where vehicles operate.
Emergency Assembly Area Marking
AS 3745:2010 Emergency evacuation plans must identify assembly points located safely away from buildings and marked clearly on facility floors and signage.
Confined Space Entry Zones
AS 2865:2009 Areas containing confined spaces requiring entry permits must be clearly marked with boundary zones warning of restricted access.
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AS 1742
Traffic Control Devices
Specifies line colours, widths, arrow designs, and placement for road markings. Ensures all traffic control devices meet national safety standards.
AS/NZS 2890
Parking Facilities
Covers bay dimensions (2.4m × 5.4m standard, 3.2m × 5.4m accessible), aisle widths, and traffic flow requirements for compliant parking areas.
AS 4586
Slip Resistance
Defines slip resistance classifications (P rating) for pedestrian surfaces. Critical for wet areas, ramps, and high-traffic zones.
AS/NZS 1428
Access & Mobility
Sets requirements for accessible parking bays, tactile indicators, and mobility access. Essential for DDA compliance and accessibility audits.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Typical widths are 100mm-150mm for standard zone boundaries, 150mm-200mm for high-risk or restricted zones that need maximum visibility. The width should be proportional to facility size and viewing distances. A massive 40,000m² warehouse might use 200mm boundaries because workers need to see them from 50+ metres away. A smaller 5,000m² facility uses 100mm lines that are perfectly visible at closer distances. High-risk zones (dangerous goods storage, confined space entries, high-voltage areas) often get double lines (two 100mm lines spaced 300mm-500mm apart with diagonal hatching between them) for unmistakable identification. We assess your facility size and recommend appropriate widths during quote stage.
AS 1319:1994 specifies the colour language. Red boundaries indicate danger, prohibition, or restricted access (use for dangerous goods storage, high-voltage areas, confined spaces requiring permits, unauthorized entry zones). Yellow boundaries indicate caution or physical hazards (use for forklift operating zones, areas with overhead loads, uneven surfaces, chemical splash zones). Blue boundaries indicate mandatory actions or PPE requirements (use for hard hat zones, hearing protection zones, safety glasses required areas). Green boundaries indicate safe zones, emergency areas, or first aid locations (use for emergency assembly points, visitor safe zones, first aid stations). White or yellow boundaries work for general operational zones that aren't hazardous (storage zones, staging areas, quality control sections).
Absolutely, and it's essential in most warehouses. Pedestrian walkways (typically marked in yellow) should pass through or around safety zones appropriately. For example, a walkway crossing through a forklift zone should maintain its yellow pedestrian marking but might narrow or have "STOP - LOOK - CROSS" warnings at the intersection. Walkways should never pass through red danger zones (dangerous goods storage, confined spaces) without specific access controls. A distribution centre in Truganina had yellow pedestrian walkways connecting entry points to offices. These passed through several operational zones. We marked each zone with appropriate boundary colours while maintaining the yellow walkway throughout. Workers could follow the safe pedestrian path while seeing which zones they were passing through based on boundary colours.
Blue boundaries (AS 1319 mandatory action colour) around areas requiring specific PPE, plus floor-mounted legends at entry points showing which PPE is required. For example: blue boundary around overhead crane area with "HARD HAT ZONE" painted at entrances, blue boundary around noisy machinery with "HEARING PROTECTION REQUIRED" at entries, blue boundary around chemical areas with "SAFETY GLASSES AND GLOVES REQUIRED" at access points. Some facilities want pictograms showing the required PPE at multiple entry points so workers can't miss them. A manufacturing facility in Altona North had inconsistent PPE compliance. We marked clear zones with blue boundaries and pictogram legends at every entry point. Their safety manager said compliance improved from roughly 70% to 98% because workers could see exactly where PPE was required and which type.
Depends entirely on traffic intensity and materials used. Standard acrylic paint in high-traffic zones needs repainting every 12-18 months. Two-pack epoxy lasts 5-7 years in the same conditions. Thermoplastic can last 8-10 years. But all markings eventually wear, particularly at points where forklifts turn or cross boundaries frequently. We recommend annual inspections to assess condition. Minor wear at crossing points can be touched up without remarking entire zones. Complete failures (markings worn through to concrete) require full removal and remarketing. A cold storage facility in Laverton North marked safety zones with standard paint in 2017. By 2019 they were barely visible. We remarked everything with two-pack epoxy. Five years later those zones still look excellent with just one minor touch-up at high-traffic intersections.
Yes, we work with your current operations and marking systems. We assess existing markings (walkways, forklift lanes, storage zones), identify which safety zones are needed based on hazard assessments, and design zone boundaries that integrate logically with current layouts. This might mean color-coding existing unmarked areas, adding boundary lines to partially defined zones, or incorporating safety zones around new equipment or processes. A warehouse in Campbellfield had basic walkways and storage zones but no formal safety zone system. We conducted a site assessment identifying six hazard areas requiring restricted access, three PPE zones, two emergency assembly points, and one dangerous goods storage area. We marked all zones using appropriate colours while maintaining their existing operational layout. The operations manager said it transformed safety compliance without disrupting their established workflows.
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