What are dead zones?
If you've worked on a construction site, you already know what a dead zone is. It's that spot in the basement where your phone shows "No Service." It's the lift core where messages won't send. The riser shaft where you lose signal the moment you step inside. The rural site where the nearest cell tower is three miles away and blocked by a hill.
Dead zones are areas on construction sites where mobile phone signal drops to zero. They're not edge cases — they're a routine feature of almost every build. Reinforced concrete, steel structures, underground levels, and remote locations all block or weaken cellular signal. On a typical multi-storey construction project, workers may lose signal across entire floors of the building.
Every worker on site knows where the dead zones are. They know which stairwell loses signal, which level of the car park is a black hole, which corner of the site requires a walk to higher ground just to check a message. It's accepted as a fact of construction life. But it shouldn't be.
Why dead zones are a safety problem
Most of the time, losing signal is an inconvenience. You can't check WhatsApp. You miss a call from the site office. You have to walk upstairs to send a text. Annoying, but manageable.
The problem is what happens when something goes wrong.
When a worker is injured in a dead zone, they can't call for help. Their phone is useless. The team above or outside doesn't know there's a problem — because the injured person has no way to tell them. Minutes pass. In medical emergencies, those minutes are the difference between a recoverable injury and a fatality.
Consider the scenarios: a trench collapse below grade level, an engineer overcome by fumes in a confined space, a fall in a basement level with no signal. In each case, the injured worker's phone is the one tool that could summon immediate help — and it doesn't work.
The delay isn't caused by negligence or indifference. It's caused by physics. Concrete blocks radio waves. Steel reinforcement acts as a Faraday cage. Underground spaces have no line of sight to cell towers. The people who could help simply don't know help is needed.
What the law actually requires
UK health and safety legislation is clear on the requirement for adequate communication on construction sites, even if the specific technology isn't prescribed.
- The Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 places a general duty on employers to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health and safety of employees. This includes providing adequate means of communication in emergencies.
- The CDM Regulations 2015 require principal contractors to plan, manage, and monitor the construction phase in a way that ensures the health and safety of all persons. This explicitly includes planning communication procedures.
- The Confined Spaces Regulations 1997 require that suitable arrangements are in place for communication and rescue. HSE Approved Code of Practice L101 states that "an adequate communications system is needed to enable communication between people inside and outside the confined space and to summon help in an emergency."
- The Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 require employers to establish and implement procedures to be followed in the event of serious and imminent danger, which includes communication systems.
If your site's communication plan assumes mobile phone signal — and that signal doesn't exist in parts of your site — there is a documented gap in your duty of care. The regulations don't say "provide communication where signal is available." They say "provide adequate communication."
Current solutions and their limitations
Construction sites have been dealing with dead zones for decades. The solutions haven't changed much:
- Mobile phones — the default communication tool for most workers. Useless without signal. The entire problem.
- Two-way radios — the traditional fallback. They work without cellular signal but cost £50–200 per unit, have limited range through concrete and steel, require regular charging, get lost or damaged on site, and can't send text messages or photos.
- Shouting — surprisingly common. Limited range, doesn't travel through concrete, useless in noisy environments, and not exactly suitable for communicating detailed information about an emergency.
- Physically walking to find someone — the final fallback. Takes time, delays emergency response, and assumes the person who needs help is able to walk.
None of these solutions adequately address the core problem: when a worker in a dead zone needs help immediately, there is no reliable way to reach the people who can provide it.
The mesh networking alternative
Bluetooth mesh networking offers a fundamentally different approach. Instead of relying on distant cell towers or expensive radio hardware, mesh networking turns the phones that workers already carry into a relay network.
Here's how it works: when you send a message, it doesn't go to a cell tower. It goes to the nearest phone running the same mesh app via Bluetooth Low Energy. That phone relays it to the next phone, which relays it to the next, and so on — up to 7 hops. The message travels phone-to-phone until it reaches the recipient.
No internet. No cellular signal. No Wi-Fi. No additional hardware. Just phones talking to phones.
The range of a single Bluetooth connection is roughly 30–100 metres depending on the environment. But with 7 hops, a message can travel hundreds of metres through a building — including through dead zones, between floors, and around concrete structures. The more phones on the mesh, the stronger and more reliable the network becomes.
Messages are end-to-end encrypted by default, so privacy isn't compromised. And because the network is entirely local — no central server, no cloud — it works regardless of what's happening with the internet or mobile networks.
What this means for site managers
For site managers and H&S professionals, mesh networking represents something that hasn't existed before: a free communication backup layer that works in every dead zone on your site.
Deployment is straightforward. Add the app to your site induction checklist. Every worker downloads it (free) and sets a display name — takes 10 seconds. The mesh network builds itself automatically as more phones join. There's no infrastructure to install, no IT department to involve, no hardware to purchase or maintain.
Safety alerts — SOS messages, hazard warnings, evacuation notices — reach everyone nearby on the mesh, even if they're underground or in areas with no mobile signal. This isn't a replacement for your existing safety systems. It's an additional layer that closes the communication gap in exactly the areas where your current systems fail.
The cost argument is straightforward. HSE investigations start at £10,000. Fines run into the millions. A single fatality is incalculable in human terms. A communication tool that works in dead zones, available free to every worker, is the kind of measure that's difficult to argue against in any risk assessment.
SiteTalkie is a Bluetooth mesh messaging app built specifically for construction sites. Offline text messaging, end-to-end encryption, hazard alerts, and SOS capability — free for all workers. Coming soon to iOS and Android. Sign up for launch notification.