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Natural fibre, biodegradable

Traditional Coir Safety Netting for a Natural, Sustainable Fit

Not every safety-net job calls for synthetic mesh. Temples, heritage properties, wells, orchards, and eco-conscious builds often prefer coconut fiber (coir) netting — a natural, rope-based safety net that has been used across Indian construction and agriculture for generations. Kushal Kraft supplies and installs coir safety netting around Ranchi for clients who want proven fall and debris protection without synthetic material.

Handwoven coconut fiber coir safety net strung across a well opening

Why Choose a Natural-Fibre Net Over Synthetic Mesh

Coir rope is spun from coconut husk fibre — coarse, strong, and naturally rot-resistant when treated properly. Unlike nylon or HDPE, it doesn't degrade into microplastic residue and it blends visually into rural, temple, and heritage settings where a bright synthetic mesh would look out of place. It has been used for centuries in wells, cattle enclosures, orchard fencing, and traditional scaffolding lashings across India, so the material's long-term behaviour under sun and rain is well understood, not a new synthetic product still being tested by time.

Coir netting isn't a like-for-like swap for every job — it's heavier per square foot and has less elasticity than synthetic fibre, so it suits open-frame safety barriers, well covers, and orchard protection better than a fine-mesh bird exclusion job. But where the brief calls for rugged, biodegradable, and visually traditional netting, it's genuinely the better material, not just a lifestyle choice.

Where coir netting fits best

  • Open wells and step-wells (baolis)
  • Temple courtyards and heritage compounds
  • Orchard and farm boundary protection
  • Traditional-style scaffolding lashings
  • Eco-conscious residential builds

Biodegradable material

Breaks down naturally at end of life instead of persisting as synthetic waste.

Rot-resistant when treated

Coir naturally resists moisture damage better than most untreated natural fibres.

Traditional aesthetic

Blends into temple, heritage, and rural settings without looking industrial.

Who This Is For

Temple committees

Well covers, courtyard barriers, and traditional-style safety fencing

Farm & orchard owners

Boundary and crop protection netting

Heritage property owners

Restoration work needing period-appropriate materials

Eco-conscious builders

Green-building projects avoiding synthetic materials where possible

How We Install Coir Safety Netting

1. Site assessment

We check the opening or barrier area and confirm coir is the right material for the load and exposure.

2. Rope and mesh sourcing

Coir rope is sourced and, where needed, pre-treated for extra rot resistance.

3. Frame or anchor fixing

Anchor points are fixed to the well rim, wall, or post structure depending on the site.

4. Hand-woven fitting

The net is woven or laced into place on-site, matching irregular openings that machine-made mesh can't.

5. Tension & safety check

Every knot and anchor is checked before we sign off the installation as complete.

Coir rope knotting detail on a traditional safety net barrier

Why Choose Kushal Kraft for Coir Netting

Coir netting is a specialist, largely hand-crafted job — most modern netting installers only work with synthetic mesh and don't stock or know how to properly lace natural rope. Our team has experience sourcing quality coir, treating it appropriately for the site conditions, and hand-weaving it into a genuinely safe, long-lasting barrier rather than treating it as a decorative afterthought.

100%
Natural fibre, no synthetic blend
Custom
Hand-woven to irregular openings
Heritage-safe
Suited to protected/traditional sites
On request
Pre-treatment for extra rot resistance

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, for the applications it's suited to — well covers, boundary barriers, and orchard protection — properly laid coir rope has been used safely for generations. It's not a substitute for synthetic mesh in high-load industrial fall-arrest situations, and we'll tell you if your job needs a different material.

Untreated coir typically lasts 1-2 years in continuous outdoor exposure; treated coir rope can last considerably longer. We recommend periodic inspection and re-tensioning as part of upkeep.

Mainly for heritage, temple, and eco-conscious projects where a natural, biodegradable, visually traditional material is preferred over synthetic mesh, or where the site's aesthetic requirements rule out plastic-based netting.

Yes, this is one of the most common traditional uses — a hand-laced coir net or grid across a well opening provides a fall barrier while staying in keeping with the site's traditional character.

We offer both — supply-only for those with their own labour, or full hand-woven installation with anchor fixing and a final safety check included.

Ask About Coir Safety Netting for Your Site

Tell us about your well, temple, or orchard project and we'll advise if coir netting is the right fit.

Visit or Contact Us

Kushal Kraft
Ratu Road, Pandra, Ranchi, Jharkhand
Phone: 8292626642
Email: kushalkraftindia@gmail.com

Areas We Serve

Coir safety netting for temples, farms, and heritage sites across Ranchi, Hazaribagh, Giridih, and Deoghar.

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