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ICSA Guidance on Leaving Mobile Cranes Unattended

Leaving a mobile crane unattended — even for short periods — introduces risks related to stability, wind exposure, mechanical systems and site security. Cranes for You includes the ICSA guidance on unattended cranes because consistent procedures and safe-parking measures are essential steps toward Goal Zero in lifting, hoisting and specialised transport operations.

Summary of the Unattended Crane Guidance

  • Securing the crane before leaving — proper shutdown sequence, parking configuration, securing booms, hooks, winches and hydraulic circuits.
  • Wind and weather considerations — maximum wind limits, storm protocols, parking radius and precautions for high-risk sites.
  • Ground and stability checks — verifying outrigger support, soil conditions, mats, and ensuring no risk of settlement while unattended.
  • Site access and security — preventing unauthorised access, establishing exclusion zones and ensuring safe fencing or barriers around the crane.
  • Documentation and communication — logging the unattended status, notifying supervisors and ensuring responsibilities are clearly assigned.

Practical Relevance for Heavy-Lift Projects

This guidance helps lifting teams:

  • prevent tip-overs or structural damage caused by wind or improper parking;
  • reduce risk during shift changes, breaks or overnight crane standby;
  • ensure consistent procedures across contractors and crane rental providers;
  • integrate unattended-crane checks into lift plans and method statements;
  • improve site safety by defining responsibility when cranes remain on site without operators.

Official Source

This information originates from the International Crane & Specialized Transport Association (ICSA) and is supported by ESTA Europe, the leading European association for abnormal transport and mobile crane safety.
Learn more at:
ICSA: https://icsa-crane.org
ESTA: https://estaeurope.eu/

Related Knowledge Articles

Ready to Improve Crane Securing Procedures?

You can download the full ICSA guidance from this page and use it to strengthen your crane-parking, shutdown and safety protocols.
If needed, Cranes for You can assist with procedure writing, training, or reviewing your internal unattended-crane rules.

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