Modular wash bays for mining sites are relocatable, above-ground steel wash pads engineered to take haul-truck axle loads, pair with closed-loop water treatment, and install in days on remote sites where civil works aren’t an option. If you’re commissioning a new pit, replacing a failing in-ground pad, or trying to get a tender across the line with a compliant wash facility on day one, the wrong choice here can stall the whole project. The right one disappears into the operation and just works.
Why Fixed In-Ground Wash Bays Struggle On Active Mine Sites
In-ground concrete wash pads were designed for fixed industrial sites that don’t move. Mine sites do. The pit advances, the ROM pad shifts, the haul road moves, and the wash bay that was perfect two years ago is now in the wrong place. Civil works cost six figures and take months. Council and water authority approvals add more. When the existing in-ground separator fails, ripping it out for repair shuts down the wash facility for weeks.
And that’s before you factor in the load rating. A concrete pad poured for 30T equipment doesn’t suddenly carry 100T when the fleet upgrades. Cracking, subsidence, and contaminated wash water seeping into the subgrade are the kinds of problems that turn into EPA notices.
In-Ground Concrete Pad
Built once, stuck forever. Designed for static sites that don’t follow the pit.
- 3 to 6 months of civil works
- Council and water authority approvals required
- Load rating fixed at pour, no upgrade path
- Repair means weeks of wash facility downtime
- Walk-away cost when the pit moves on
Modular Above-Ground Wash Bay
Engineered to move with the operation. Days to install, days to relocate.
- Days to install on prepared hardstand
- No council approval for the structure itself
- Scales from 1T parts wash to 100T+ haul trucks
- Dismantles, moves, recommissions with the pit
- Asset value retained, not sunk into concrete
What ‘Modular’ Actually Means: Relocatable, Scalable, No Civils
A modular above-ground wash bay isn’t portable. It’s a fully engineered, hot-dip galvanised steel platform built in standard sections that bolt together on a prepared hardstand. No excavation. No civil works. No council approval for the structure itself. The bay scales in 2.4m length increments and comes in 3m, 6m or 9m widths to suit different vehicle types and site layouts.
When the pit moves, the bay moves. Dismantle, transport, reinstall, recommission. That flexibility is the single biggest reason mining operators are pivoting away from in-ground pads.
Load Rating Tiers From 30T Per Axle Through To 100T+ For Extra Heavy Duty
WashBay HQ load ratings cover the full range of mine site equipment:
1T per axle: parts wash, small fleet items
12T per axle: light trucks, utes, service vehicles
20T per axle: hire equipment, smaller dozers, graders
30T per axle: standard mining wash duty, dozers, water carts, drill rigs
80T per axle: heavy haul equipment, articulated dump trucks
Over 100T per axle: extra heavy-duty for OEM haul trucks and oversized plant
Every rating is backed by engineering drawings and structural certification, not just a number on a brochure. If the auditor asks what the bay can carry, you have the paperwork.
Load Capacity Across The WashBay HQ Range
Per-axle load rating, scaled visually so you can match the pad to the fleet at a glance.
Most mining sites land on the 30T to 80T tier, with a single 100T+ pad for the OEM fleet. We size the bay to the heaviest gear on site, not the average.
Sizing The Pad For Haul Trucks, Dozers, Drill Rigs, And Water Carts
Width matters as much as load rating. A 3m bay handles a light truck. A 6m bay covers most dozers and water carts. A 9m bay is the standard for haul trucks and oversized plant. Length is configured in 2.4m increments, so the pad fits the longest vehicle that’ll roll across it. For a typical mining fleet, the most common configuration is 6m or 9m wide and somewhere between 9.6m and 19.2m long, with a load rating tuned to the heaviest gear on site.
Hot-Dip Galvanised Steel And AS/NZS 4680: Why It Matters In The Pilbara And Bowen Basin
Australian Standard AS/NZS 4680 governs hot-dip galvanising of steel articles. It’s the difference between a wash bay that lasts decades in the Pilbara red dirt and one that’s rusting out within three years. Hot-dip galvanising coats the steel inside and out with a tough zinc barrier that holds up against water, chemicals, mud, and salt-laden air. Painted or powder-coated finishes can’t compete in those conditions.
WashBay HQ structural steel is built to AS/NZS 4680:2006 and supplied with the certification. For mine sites in remote regions where replacement parts take weeks to arrive, that longevity isn’t a nice-to-have; it’s the whole point.
Standards Your Mine Site Wash Bay Should Meet
If the supplier can’t reference these on a tender response, the documentation gap will surface during audit.
Hydrocarbon Contamination And EPA Discharge Limits On Mine Wash Water
Mine wash water carries diesel, hydraulic oil, engine oil, grease, heavy solids and fine sediment. State EPAs apply strict limits on what can be discharged, typically under 10 to 30 mg/L total petroleum hydrocarbons, depending on the receiving environment, no visible oil sheen, and tight controls on suspended solids and pH. Mine sites without sewer connection face additional scrutiny because everything either gets pumped out, recycled, or evaporated, and the regulator wants to see how each pathway is documented.
Integrated Oil Water Separators And Closed-Loop Recycling For Remote Sites
On a remote site, every litre of fresh water has a transport cost. Closed-loop recycling, where treated wash water cycles back through the wash bay, makes the economics work. The setup pairs the modular wash pad with an oil water separator and a recycling tank. WashBay HQ Vertical Tube Coalescing separators handle 1500, 3000 or 6000 L/h, drop TPH below 10 mg/L, and feed the recycling loop with clean water. The system runs without operator intervention and dramatically reduces fresh water draw.
What Sits On The Hardstand: A Turnkey Mining Wash System
Six components, engineered to work as one closed loop. Each one earns its place on a remote site.
First Flush Diversion And Stormwater Control On Unroofed Wash Pads
Mining wash pads are usually unroofed, which means rainfall is a compliance issue. First flush diversion captures the initial dirty runoff, the part carrying the heaviest contaminant load, and routes it through treatment. Subsequent clean rainfall is allowed to bypass the stormwater. Combined with integrated bunding on the pad itself, this keeps contaminated water on-site and stops EPA notices before they get written.
Form 15 Certificates, Engineering Drawings, And Audit-Ready Paperwork
Mining tenders and government contracts increasingly require Form 15 compliance certification for any installed structure. WashBay HQ supplies every system with the full document pack, engineer-signed drawings, AS/NZS 4680 certification, Form 15, trade waste documentation where applicable, WHS compliance support, and EPA discharge calculations. The compliance file is built before the bay is shipped, not chased after the install.
Install Timelines: Days, Not Months, Even On Remote Sites
A typical WashBay HQ install on a prepared hardstand takes days, not the months an in-ground build requires. The standard sequence:
Hardstand preparation completed by the site crew to spec
Modular sections delivered to the site by truck
Install and bolt-up by the WashBay HQ team or supervised local crew
Oil water separator and treatment connection
Commission, sample, sign off
Quick Audit: Is Your Existing In-Ground Pad Costing You More Than It’s Worth?
Walk past your wash facility this week with this checklist. Tick what applies.
Three or more ticks? A modular replacement will usually pay back inside the first relocation.
Even in the Pilbara or Bowen Basin, where logistics add time, the structure can be operational within a week of arrival. Compare that to six months of civil works for an in-ground pad, and the productivity argument writes itself.
What Changes When The Pit Moves: Relocating A Modular Wash Bay
Mine pits move. That’s the nature of the work. A modular wash bay dismantles in days, packs onto a truck, and is reinstated at the new location. Hot-dip galvanised steel survives the relocation without losing structural integrity. The associated oil water separator and recycling tank move with it. There’s no walk-away cost, no abandoned concrete, and no new civil works to fund.
Cheap Modular Vs Engineered Modular: Where The Tender Risk Sits
How To Compare Suppliers On Real-World Mining Performance
A few questions cut through the brochures fast:
Are you actually Australian-made or rebadged from overseas?
What’s the load rating, and can you supply the engineering drawings?
Hot-dip galvanised to AS/NZS 4680? Show the certificate.
Form 15 supplied as standard or chargeable extra?
Have you installed on sites comparable to mine, Pilbara, Bowen Basin, and Goldfields?
If we relocate the bay in 18 months, what’s involved?
1. Discovery Call 2. Proposal 3. Design & Approval
We talk through fleet, axle loads, site location, and discharge pathway so the specification fits the operation. 24-hour turnaround on a fixed-price proposal with drawings, load ratings, and full documentation outlined. Engineering, fabrication, installation and commissioning, with Form 15 and trade waste paperwork supplied.
If you’ve got a mine site wash bay project on the books, or an existing in-ground pad that’s costing more in repairs than it’s worth, give the team a call on 1800 524 002 or email sales@washbayhq.com.au. Trusted by Australia’s largest mining and government fleets, built for the toughest conditions in the country.
From Discovery Call To Commissioned Pad
Four stages. Fixed price after the proposal. No surprise extras at install.
Get Your Modular Wash Bay For Mining Sites Quoted In 24 Hours
Fixed-price proposal. Engineering drawings included. Form 15 and full compliance pack supplied as standard. Pilbara, Bowen Basin, Goldfields and remote NT all covered.
Modular Wash Bays For Mining Sites: Common Questions
How long does a modular wash bay take to install on a remote mine site?
On a prepared hardstand, the bolt-up itself runs across a few days. Add freight time to the Pilbara, Bowen Basin or remote NT, and most projects are operational within a week of arrival. The civil-works equivalent for an in-ground pad is six months on a good run.
What’s the maximum axle load a modular wash bay can handle?
The standard range goes up to 100T+ per axle for OEM haul trucks and oversized plant. Every rating tier is backed by engineering drawings and structural certification, so the auditor sees paperwork, not a marketing number.
Do modular wash bays for mining sites meet EPA discharge requirements?
Yes. The integrated Vertical Tube Coalescing oil water separator drops total petroleum hydrocarbons below the 10 mg/L threshold most state EPAs apply. Combined with first flush diversion and bunding, the system is engineered to be audit-ready from day one.
Can the wash bay be relocated when the pit moves?
That’s the whole point of the modular design. The bay dismantles in days, packs onto a truck, and reinstates at the new location. Hot-dip galvanised steel survives the move without losing structural integrity. The separator and recycling tank move with it.
Is council approval required to install one?
The above-ground structure itself doesn’t need council approval the way an in-ground pad does, since there’s no excavation. Trade waste agreements and any discharge approvals are handled separately, and we supply the documentation to support those applications.
How much fresh water does a closed-loop system actually save?
Closed-loop recycling cycles treated wash water back into the bay, so the fresh-water draw drops to top-up volumes only. On remote sites where water is trucked in, this is usually the single biggest operating-cost saving the system delivers.
What’s included in the compliance pack?
Engineer-signed structural drawings, AS/NZS 4680:2006 hot-dip galvanising certification, Form 15 compliance certificate, EPA discharge calculations, trade waste documentation where applicable, and WHS compliance support. The pack ships with the bay, it isn’t chased after install.
Are unroofed wash bays compliant on mine sites?
They can be, when first flush diversion, integrated bunding and proper oil water separation are part of the design. The system captures the dirty initial runoff and routes clean rainfall to stormwater. That’s what keeps the regulator happy on the unroofed pads most mining sites end up running.