CDM 2015 Awareness
Develop a practical understanding of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 to improve construction safety, manage project risks, and support legal compliance.
Beginner
Construction work remains one of the highest-risk industries, with hazards that can lead to serious injuries, ill health, project delays, and costly legal consequences if they are not properly managed. The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 (CDM 2015) provide the legal framework for planning, managing, monitoring, and coordinating health and safety throughout the lifecycle of a construction project.
This CDM 2015 Awareness Course provides learners with a practical understanding of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 and how they apply to construction projects across the UK. Rather than simply explaining legal requirements, the course demonstrates how effective planning, communication, cooperation, and risk management help create safer working environments while supporting legal compliance.
Learners will explore the responsibilities of clients, designers, principal designers, principal contractors, contractors, and workers, gaining a clear understanding of how every duty holder contributes to improving health and safety. The course also explains construction phase planning, welfare facilities, risk assessments, hazard control, cooperation between project teams, and the importance of eliminating risks during the design stage whenever reasonably practicable.
Whether working on domestic projects, commercial developments, infrastructure projects, or refurbishment work, learners will develop the knowledge needed to recognise construction hazards, understand their legal responsibilities, and contribute to safer project delivery from planning through to completion.
CDM 2015 Awareness Training introduces learners to the principles, legal duties, and practical application of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015.
The training explains how health and safety should be considered from the earliest stages of a project, ensuring that risks are identified, assessed, and controlled before construction work begins. It highlights the importance of cooperation between all duty holders and demonstrates how good planning and effective communication reduce accidents, improve project management, and protect everyone affected by construction activities.
Rather than focusing solely on legislation, this course provides practical workplace knowledge that helps learners understand how CDM 2015 supports safer construction sites through better planning, competent management, appropriate supervision, worker engagement, and continuous risk management.
By completing this training, learners will gain a stronger understanding of their own responsibilities while supporting a proactive health and safety culture throughout construction projects.
This course is designed for individuals and organisations involved in planning, designing, managing, supervising, or carrying out construction work where an understanding of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 is essential.
This course is suitable for:
Construction workers involved in building, refurbishment, maintenance, demolition, or civil engineering projects.
Site supervisors, forepersons, and team leaders responsible for managing work activities safely.
Contractors and subcontractors working on construction sites of any size.
Principal contractors coordinating multiple contractors throughout construction projects.
Clients commissioning construction work who need to understand their legal responsibilities under CDM 2015.
Designers, architects, engineers, and surveyors responsible for reducing risks through design.
Principal designers coordinating health and safety during the pre-construction phase.
Project managers, construction managers, and contract managers overseeing project delivery.
Health and safety advisors supporting compliance within construction organisations.
Anyone preparing to begin a career in the UK construction industry.
The course is equally beneficial for employers seeking to strengthen workforce competence, improve regulatory compliance, reduce workplace risks, and promote a positive safety culture across construction projects.
This course provides a structured introduction to the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015, explaining how they help improve health, safety, and welfare across construction projects of all sizes.
Learners will gain practical knowledge of:
The purpose and scope of the CDM 2015 Regulations.
The legal responsibilities of clients, designers, principal designers, principal contractors, contractors, and workers.
Construction project planning and pre-construction duties.
Hazard identification, risk assessment, and suitable control measures.
Designing out foreseeable risks wherever reasonably practicable.
Construction phase plans and health and safety file requirements.
Cooperation, coordination, and communication between project teams.
Site welfare facilities and worker wellbeing requirements.
Competence, training, supervision, and workforce engagement.
Monitoring compliance and promoting continuous improvement throughout construction projects.
Throughout the course, learners will explore realistic workplace scenarios that demonstrate how effective application of CDM 2015 can reduce accidents, improve project coordination, protect workers, and support legal compliance across the construction industry.
Construction remains one of the UK's highest-risk industries, where poor planning and ineffective risk management can result in serious injuries, ill health, costly project delays, legal enforcement, and financial penalties. The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 (CDM 2015) were introduced to improve health and safety by ensuring that everyone involved in a construction project understands and fulfils their responsibilities.
CDM 2015 promotes a proactive approach to managing health and safety from the earliest design stages through to project completion. Rather than addressing risks only after work begins, the regulations encourage duty holders to identify hazards early, eliminate foreseeable risks wherever reasonably practicable, and implement suitable control measures before construction activities start.
Without effective CDM management, organisations may experience:
Increased workplace accidents and serious injuries.
Poor coordination between designers, contractors, and clients.
Unsafe working practices and uncontrolled construction hazards.
Delays caused by inadequate planning and poor communication.
Enforcement action by regulatory authorities.
Financial losses resulting from accidents, project disruption, and non-compliance.
Damage to business reputation and client confidence.
By completing this CDM 2015 Awareness Course, learners will understand how effective planning, cooperation, communication, and competent management contribute to safer construction projects. They will also develop the knowledge needed to recognise hazards, understand legal responsibilities, support risk reduction, and promote a positive health and safety culture throughout every stage of a construction project.