Archive for the ‘Building regulations’ Category

Do building surveyors make the best fire safety engineers?

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Can building surveyors prepare alternative solutions? If you are using a Consulting Building Surveyor in Victoria, Australia to prepare alternative solutions for the fire performance requirements you need to read two articles and decide for yourself if this complies with the legislation. If you are a Relevant Building Surveyor and relying on a Consulting Building Surveyor to prepare the design you definitely need to read both articles too!

Image courtesy of The Building Commission

The article by Robert Marscivotere recently posted on the Hendry Group’s Essential Matters blog brought up the issue again of whether Consulting (and Relevant?) Building Surveyors can prepare a fire safety design. Stephen Kip, a very well known and respected Fire Safety Engineer and registered (non-practising) Building Surveyor, recently provided a response to Essential Matters regarding Mr Marscivotere’s article. Mr Kip provided a copy of a paper he has previously submitted to the Society of Fire Safety and the Australian Institute of Building Surveyors.

After reading both papers we consider it clear, as stated by Mr Kip’s paper, that you need a Fire Safety Engineer to prepare an alternative solution (a design) for compliance with the fire performance requirements in the Building Regulations 2006.

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Attention all Architects Alterations don’t need a building permit …?!?

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

What … you’re saying? What? That goes against everything I know about the building codes and the regulations! Yes, you’re right, this is subject to some limitations. But how about the potential benefit!

Image courtesy of Metro Partitions

It’s definitely not as eye catching in a headline to say “Alterations don’t need a building permit provided you satisfy the criteria for exemptions in Item 4 of Schedule 8 to the Building Regulations 2006“. Even having qualified this it is still worthwhile knowing the effect of the successful application of these criteria.

It exempts from a building permit works like:

  • non-structural internal alterations in houses e.g kitchen and bathroom renovations; and
  • internal non-structural “cosmetic” alterations in non-domestic buildings (commercial, industrial, retail etc) that don’t change the use or the layout other than “moveable” furniture.

That’s still a pretty good get – let’s have a look at these criteria in more detail: (more…)