Pendulum slip testing for healthcare & care homes sites across Liverpool, performed under our UKAS ISO 17025 accreditation. Liverpool duty-holders face a dense waterfront leisure economy and a rapidly expanding hotel sector, and the evidential standard expected of any slip-risk assessment scales accordingly.
Liverpool's healthcare & care homes estate concentrates around the Pier Head, Liverpool ONE and Albert Dock, with a wider catchment across Wirral, Sefton, Knowsley, St Helens and the rest of Merseyside. The HSE region of competence is North West.
Within this sector, the typical risk vectors are vulnerable users, mobility-aid contact patches, frequent contamination from bodily fluids, deep-cleaning cycles. Slip and fall accidents are a leading cause of injury in adults over 65 — and remain a top-three contributor to NHS bed-day costs. The duty-holder is regulated by the Care Quality Commission, NHS Estates, the HSE and the Coroner's Court, and the duty of care to vulnerable patients is materially higher and the evidential standard for any incident report is correspondingly elevated.
Typical surfaces we test in Liverpool healthcare & care homes sites include vinyl safety flooring, sheet vinyl with welded seams, polyurethane resin, anti-slip coatings. Where the surface is wet, contaminated, or in a barefoot zone, the appropriate slider and contamination protocol is selected at the point of test.
Our engineers test to BS EN 16165:2021 (the current European pendulum standard) and BS 7976-2 where required. We carry calibrated CRT-SRT/Wessex pendulums, Four-S sliders for shod-foot wet testing, and TRL-rubber sliders where the application requires it. Every report carries calibration cert references and a UKAS schedule reference.
For healthcare & care homes specifically: wet and dry pendulum testing is essential — and care-home corridors should also be considered for ramp-test (R-rating) characterisation.
Reports are PDF-delivered within 24 hours of the site visit. They include the full PTV dataset, photography, calibration cert references, UKSRG classification, methodology narrative, and remediation recommendations where any test point falls below the relevant slip-risk threshold.
Tell us the Liverpool site postcode, surface type and approximate area. Fixed-fee written quote within 4 working hours.
Booked into the next available slot for Liverpool and Merseyside. Out-of-hours and weekend work routinely arranged.
UKAS-accredited pendulum testing on site. Wet, dry, multi-direction. Verbal feedback before our engineer leaves.
Signed PDF report inside 24 hours. PTV dataset, classification, photography, calibration certs, remediation guidance.
Free phone consultation on findings. Independent remediation guidance. Discounted re-test after any treatment work.
Optional annual re-test programme to maintain auditable continuity for your insurer or HSE inspection record.
Standard mobilisation to Liverpool and Merseyside is 2–5 working days. Urgent or post-incident response within 48 hours is available — call 0208 246 5562 to confirm capacity.
Yes. Our pendulum slip testing is performed under our UKAS ISO 17025 accreditation, using calibrated equipment with traceable certification. UKAS accreditation is held by a minority of UK slip-testing providers and is the most defensible credential for an evidential report.
You receive a clear narrative of why it failed, which test points are problematic, and a tiered set of remediation options — operational controls, surface treatment, or replacement. We are independent of treatment manufacturers, so the advice is free of conflict.
Yes. Reports are formatted to meet the evidential standards expected by UK insurers, the HSE region North West office, and the courts. Calibration certificates and chain-of-custody documentation are included as standard.
Yes. Our Liverpool field cover extends across Wirral, Sefton, Knowsley, St Helens and the wider Merseyside at no additional travel cost. Single fixed-fee quote, inclusive of travel.
Tell us where, what, and when. We'll come back with a written quote, an engineer name, and a date — not a brochure.