Why Clinical Oversight of Internal Renovations is a Structural Necessity
When an owner renovates a kitchen or bathroom, they are not just changing aesthetics — they are interacting with the building's primary "Bones": its slab, its fire-sealant barriers, and its shared hydraulic stacks.
Without a formal integration protocol, a private renovation can lead to "Lazy Capital" loss through slab-drilling accidents, waterproofing failures, or the breach of fire-rated compartments that expose the entire building to regulatory non-compliance. This protocol provides a forensic, step-by-step roadmap that protects both the renovating owner and every other lot in the scheme.
A single drill through a post-tensioned cable causes catastrophic structural damage and immediate shoring requirements — estimated repair $80,000+.
Every new pipe or cable penetrating a fire-rated ceiling or wall requires a certified fire collar — omitting it voids the building's fire-safety compliance.
Incorrect connection to the shared hydraulic stack can cause backflow, slow drainage for three floors, and flooding in lots below during a blockage.
A failed bathroom waterproofing membrane doesn't become visible until the neighbour's ceiling shows water damage — sometimes 12–18 months later.
Removing carpet without acoustic underlay that meets the scheme's L'nT,w standard is the leading cause of owner noise disputes in QLD strata.
Unprotected lift cars and foyers during a renovation can sustain thousands in cosmetic damage charged back to the body corporate — not the owner.
The Elements of Technical Approval
Three technical pillars that every renovation involving common property systems must satisfy before a single tradesperson enters the building.
The building's slab is a shared asset — it belongs to every owner in the scheme, not just the lot above it. Our protocol strictly prohibits any drilling or "chasing" of the slab without a GPR (Ground Penetrating Radar) scan and written engineering approval.
This clinical approach ensures that post-tensioned cables and reinforcement bars remain intact. A single unauthorised drill through a post-tensioned cable can cause structural instability requiring immediate propping, engineering assessment, and repairs costing $80,000–$150,000 — paid from the Sinking Fund, not the owner's insurance.
GPR Scan requirement: Any slab penetration of diameter >25mm requires a GPR scan by a certified operator (QBCC-licenced) before drilling commences. The scan report is lodged in the Digital Vault and remains permanently attached to the lot's renovation record.
Every renovation that touches a wet area or a ceiling cavity interacts with the scheme's fire-stopping and plumbing systems. The scheme's fire-rated compartment integrity must be maintained as-built — any penetration that is not properly sealed and certified can void the building's fire compliance at the next inspection.
This pillar requires owners to provide Form 16 certification for all fire-collar installations and hydraulic connections. We ensure that a private luxury bathroom does not create a "Silent Leak" that saturates the neighbour's ceiling or a fire pathway that compromises the whole floor.
Required for every new fire-rated penetration — issued by a competent person confirming the fire collar meets the approved standard.
Any new connection to the shared stack requires a licensed hydraulic contractor's compliance certificate — not a handyman's invoice.
Waterproofing must be inspected and signed off by a licensed certifier before any tiles are laid. Once tiled, a failed membrane is invisible — until water appears in the lot below.
The shift from carpet to hard flooring is the primary driver of owner disputes in QLD strata buildings. Our protocol sets a clinical L'nT,w acoustic rating that must be met by an independent post-installation test — defining the technical standard for underlay and insulation upfront rather than resolving disputes after installation.
The Five-Stage Renovation Approval Flow
Every renovation involving common property systems moves through this five-stage forensic process before, during, and after the works.
Full architectural drawings, materials schedule, and contractor details submitted to the Strata Manager using the formal Renovation Application Form. No works commence without written approval.
Clearview reviews the plans against the three-pillar protocol. Slab penetrations, fire-rated interfaces, hydraulic connections, and acoustic requirements are assessed. Any deficiencies returned to the owner with technical commentary.
Every contractor submits a Site Management Plan covering debris removal, elevator protection, noise-restricted hours, and public liability insurance verified for multi-residential works. Unvetted contractors cannot access the building.
Clearview enforces hold points at critical construction stages: waterproofing before tiling, slab penetrations before concrete is poured, and fire collars before ceiling is closed. No stage proceeds without sign-off.
All certificates (Form 16, hydraulic sign-off, waterproofing, acoustic test) are collected and uploaded to the Digital Vault as permanent "As-Built" records attached to the lot. If a leak occurs in five years, the plumbing layout is instantly available.
The Renovation Audit Cycle
Two systems that go beyond the standard approval process — ensuring the Committee's oversight is forensic, not merely administrative.
The Pre-Start Diligence Review
Auditing the contractor's technical credentials before a single tile is removed
We achieve a higher standard of protection by vetting the renovation "Team" before works commence. We don't just ask for an insurance certificate — we verify that their Public Liability cover specifically applies to work on multi-residential schemes, as standard home renovation policies often exclude this class of work.
This forensic oversight ensures that the building's common property isn't treated like a residential house site, protecting the bones of the building from amateur damage and the scheme from uninsured liability exposure.
Active licence status, licence category, and any disciplinary history confirmed — a photocopy proves nothing.
Policy wording reviewed — "residential" cover does not automatically extend to strata buildings. We require the specific endorsement confirmed in writing.
Contractor provides a written SMP covering rubbish disposal, work hours (no power tools before 7am or after 5pm weekdays), and lift car protection requirements.
All contractors must complete Clearview's building induction — covering emergency procedures, common property boundaries, and scheme-specific requirements — before any access is granted.
The Final Certification Vault
Archiving private renovation data for future scheme integrity
We protect the scheme's long-term value by archiving every renovation "As-Built" drawing and certification in our Digital Vault — permanently attached to the relevant lot record.
If a leak occurs five years from now, the Committee can instantly access the technical layout of the private plumbing in that unit. This removes the "Information Lag" during emergencies and ensures that the technical memory of the scheme grows with every private upgrade — making future maintenance cheaper, faster, and more accurate.
Enhanced Assets Without Friction
The outcome of The Renovation Integration Protocol is a building where private upgrades are a source of pride, not a source of risk. You remove the "Management Friction" of unauthorised works and replace it with a clinical, transparent approval process.
Owners gain the confidence to invest in their homes, knowing their neighbours are held to the same high engineering standard. The Committee fulfils its duty to steward the common property against the risks of poor craftsmanship — and every renovation becomes a data point in the building's permanent technical history, not a liability waiting to surface in five years.