AAU Student Projects is unavailable between June 15th 1.30pm and 17th 1.30pm due to planned system maintenance. The projects cannot be downloaded during this period.
AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


SCALEX: Tougher, smarter, faster.

Authors

;

Term

4. term

Publication year

2026

Submitted on

Pages

218

Abstract

This master’s thesis investigates how to design a more durable and efficient scaffolding tool for the demanding conditions faced by scaffolders. The starting point is that the industry-standard ratchet wrench is routinely used as a hammer and therefore typically fails within 1–2 months, undermining speed and productivity in a job characterized by piece-rate pay and the need for high mobility with minimal tools. The project applies a user-centered design approach following the Double Diamond model, with extensive field engagement: observations, interviews, site visits, low-fidelity mock-ups, functional prototypes, and 1:1 metal models tested in real work environments. Iterative cycles produced insights into durability, functionality, ergonomics, aesthetics, production, and user behavior, notably the consistent use of the wrench for impact tasks. The outcome is SCALEX, a multi-purpose scaffolding tool that encloses the ratchet mechanism to reduce breakage and incorporates a weighted hammer end to lower physical effort and potentially reduce the number of hits per wedge. Additional design features include a 22 mm one-direction ratchet compatible with common systems and mountable in existing holders, and a lattice structure that reduces overall weight while shifting the center of mass toward the hammer head. The project highlights the strengths and challenges of user-centered design, including the need to critically interpret stated user needs and the importance of contextual testing. Overall, it presents a tool designed to increase durability, reduce failures, and support a faster, smoother workflow for scaffolders.

Denne masteropgave undersøger, hvordan et mere holdbart og effektivt stilladsværktøj kan designes til de krævende forhold, som stilladsarbejdere arbejder under. Udgangspunktet er, at branchens standard-skraldenøgle ofte bruges som hammer og derfor typisk går i stykker efter 1–2 måneder, hvilket forringer tempo og produktivitet i et arbejde præget af akkordløn og behov for høj mobilitet med få redskaber. Projektet anvender en brugercentreret designmetode efter Double Diamond og inddrager omfattende feltarbejde: observationer, interviews, arbejdspladsbesøg, lav-fideligitetsmockups, funktionsprototyper og 1:1 metalmodeller testet i virkelige arbejdssituationer. De iterative forløb gav indsigter i holdbarhed, funktionalitet, ergonomi, æstetik, produktion og brugeradfærd, herunder at værktøjet systematisk bruges til slagopgaver. Resultatet er SCALEX, et multifunktionelt stilladsværktøj med indkapslet skraldemekanisme for at minimere brud samt en vægtet hammerende, der reducerer den fysiske indsats og kan medføre færre slag pr. kile. Yderligere designelementer inkluderer en 22 mm énvejs skralde, der passer til gængse systemer og kan monteres i eksisterende holdere, samt en gitterstruktur, der sænker vægten og flytter tyngdepunktet mod hammerhovedet. Projektet belyser styrker og udfordringer ved brugercentreret design, bl.a. behovet for kritisk tolkning af udtalte behov og vigtigheden af kontekstuelle tests. Samlet set præsenteres et værktøj, der er designet til at øge holdbarheden, reducere brud og understøtte et hurtigere og mere smidigt arbejdsflow for stilladsarbejdere.

[This apstract has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project full text]