0131 335 3685 (24 Hours) enquiries@purvis-marquees.co.uk

Three sites.

One weekend.

One of them just changed the access route.

You already know the pressure:

Fixed dates. Moving parts. Weather on its own plan.

Here is a field‑tested way to stay in front of it.

Start with one source of truth

Build a master schedule with every site, task, and dependency.

Include hold points for safety and client sign‑off.

Add clear cut‑offs for scope or layout changes.

Assign a named lead per site and per workstream.

Resource control in real time

  • Map crews by skill and certification so swaps are safe.
  • Track vehicles, plant, and drivers by hour, not by day.
  • Hold a small redeploy pool: crew, vehicle, and critical kit.
  • Stage spare roofs, legs, and fixings within 60–90 minutes of each site.

Plan transport with intent

  • Write load lists for tasks in order of use.
  • Backhaul after first drops to cut dead miles.
  • Use night moves where allowed to keep sites flowing.
  • Record every load with photos to prevent disputes.

Expect ground and weather changes

  • Pre‑book trackway with an overflow option.
  • Keep stakes, plates, and ballast ready for a site switch.
  • Issue anemometers and agree wind thresholds in writing.
  • Set action triggers: sheet off, add ballast, suspend work.

Lock in access before wheels roll

  • Walk routes with each organiser and security lead.
  • Put gate numbers, QR codes, and contacts into crew briefs.
  • Plan contingency parking for artics and rigids.
  • Allocate banksmen and traffic control windows.

Make compliance visible and fast

  • Write RAMS per site and layout.
  • Run daily toolbox talks and record attendance.
  • Keep LOLER and PUWER docs on site and online.
  • Name who can stop work on safety, and when.

Keep comms tight and simple

  • One channel per site for quick updates and photos.
  • A daily cross‑site call at a fixed time.
  • Use RAG status on each workstream with owners.
  • Log every change with requestor, impact, and decision.

Standardise checks that catch errors early

  • Use plumb lines and lasers on every bay.
  • Check sheet tension morning and evening.
  • Measure door and egress clearances, do not eyeball.
  • Walk routes with stewards before handover.

Structure your work for momentum

  • Break builds into 90‑minute tasks with clear finishes.
  • Load the first two tasks on top of the truck.
  • Finish one structure to handover state before starting the next.
  • Photograph and tag every anchor by bay.

Examples to benchmark your setup

  • Two counties on one weekend: set separate site leads, one roaming fixer, and a shared spare kit pool. Kept both sites moving when one needed ballast after rain.
  • Festival plus game fair: night install under noise limits, day‑time heavy moves. Daily cross‑site call flagged a plant clash early and swapped slots before it hurt the build.
  • High‑wind week: applied thresholds. Paused sheeting, increased ballast, extended the programme by six hours, still hit handover due to front‑loaded tasks.

Questions to stress‑test your plan

  • Where is your single source of truth, and who owns it?
  • What is your wind and water red line, written and agreed?
  • Which kit and people sit in your rapid redeploy pool?
  • How fast can you replan a day when access changes at 06:00?

Next steps you can take today

  • Build the master schedule with change cut‑offs.
  • Name site and workstream leads with authority levels.
  • Create the redeploy pool and stage spare kit near sites.
  • Write and share action triggers for weather and ground.

If you want a second set of eyes, bring your dates and site maps. We will help you pressure‑test the plan and cover the gaps.