The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has completed its investigation death of a subcontractor working in a Scottish hospital supervised by Graham.
The 51-year-old man, who has not been publicly identified, suffered head injuries while working at Baird Family Hospital in Aberdeen on January 18. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
The HSE has sent a confidential report into the incident to the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS), Scotland’s tax service and death investigation authority.
A COPFS spokesman said: “The investigation is ongoing and the family will continue to be kept updated with any major developments.”
The report is being examined by the Crown Health and Safety Investigation Unit, which leads the prosecution of health and safety cases in Scotland. The body is responsible for investigating complex work-related deaths and provides advice to authorities at all stages of the investigation.
Baird Family Hospital will bring together maternity, neonatal, reproductive medicine, breast and gynecology care under one roof. It will replace Aberdeen Maternity Hospital, which will be demolished once the new building is operational.
The hospital was due to open in 2020 but has suffered delays, which project bosses have blamed on Brexit and Covid. Updated opening dates have not been released. The project is currently undergoing design changes.
Graham signed a £161m construction contract in 2020 to build the hospital, as well as a hematology, oncology and radiotherapy unit, to be called the ANCHOR Centre. Since then, the cost of construction has increased by £100 million and £261 million.
Graham declined to comment.