Glossary
Plain-language defs, slang, acronym index.
Construction has accumulated decades of acronyms, technical terms, trade slang, and regulatory jargon, and the same term often means something different in a contract clause than it does on the tools. This glossary defines the terms that show up in NCC clauses, HIA and MBA contracts, council documents, and site conversations, in plain English, with enough context to understand why the term matters and where to find the full definition in the source document.
It is for anyone who encounters an unfamiliar term in a building document: builders reading a specification for the first time, building designers working through NCC Deemed-to-Satisfy provisions, owner-builders trying to understand what their certifier's letter means, and tradespeople looking up what a clause in their subcontract actually requires. The glossary is also the index that connects terms across the other ten pillars.
Chalkline's glossary is different from a dictionary: each entry says what the term means in practice, not just in theory. If a term appears in a clause that builders routinely misread in their favour, the entry says so. Use the search box to find terms directly, or browse by pillar for terms relevant to your current work.
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Concept
- concept 25 May 2026Atmospheric testing (confined space) Atmospheric testing is the pre-entry confined-space gas test under AS/NZS 2865: oxygen 19.5-23.5%, flammables under 5% LEL, before anyone enters.
- concept 11 June 2026Claimed amount The claimed amount is the figure a claimant states in a payment claim. No payment schedule served in time makes it a statutory debt. Here's how it works.
- concept 11 June 2026Community title: shared-scheme lots that are not strata Community title creates a land-lot estate with shared association property and a management body. It is not the same as strata, but the terminology differs by state.
- concept 11 June 2026Construct-only: building to the client's design (and whose risk that is) Construct-only: the client's consultants hold the design, the builder builds to issued drawings, and design liability stays off the builder.
- concept 25 May 2026Cut-in technique: brushing a sharp paint edge Cutting in is brushing a sharp paint edge where wall meets ceiling, skirting, or trim. Done well it reads pro; done badly it is the most visible paint defect.
- concept 11 June 2026Delay costs Delay costs are the time-related expenses a builder can claim when the principal causes a delay: extended preliminaries, supervision, idle plant and escalation.
- concept 25 May 2026Gas Certificate of Compliance A gas Certificate of Compliance is a licensed gasfitter's sign-off that gas work meets AS/NZS 5601.1. It is separate from the plumbing and electrical certificates.
- concept 11 June 2026Internal pressure in wind design Internal pressure is the upward push wind exerts on a roof from inside. A dominant opening raises it, adding to external suction to increase total uplift.
- concept 25 May 2026Mastotermes darwiniensis (giant northern termite) Mastotermes darwiniensis, the giant northern termite, is Australia's most destructive termite. Building in the tropical north needs barriers certified against it.
- concept 25 May 2026NCC condensation management (Part 10.8) NCC Part 10.8 sets condensation rules for walls and roofs: vapour-permeable wraps by climate zone and drained cavities in cool zones. What NCC 2025 changes.
- concept 11 June 2026Overlooking: the privacy control that limits windows onto neighbours Overlooking limits direct views from windows and balconies into neighbours' habitable rooms and private open space. ResCode, ADG and R-Codes rules explained.
- concept 11 June 2026Scheduled amount: what the respondent commits to pay The scheduled amount is what a respondent commits to pay in a SOP payment schedule. Low or missing schedules trigger adjudication rights for the claimant.
- concept 25 May 2026Stormwater management Stormwater management is the site engineering that handles runoff from roof and paving: detention, soakwells, the point of discharge, and council requirements.
- concept 11 June 2026Strata plan: the registered plan that creates lots and common property A strata plan is the registered plan dividing a building into lots and common property. Lot boundaries run off walls, floors, and ceilings, not survey pegs.
- concept 25 May 2026String line: the set-out reference line A string line is a taut line stretched between two points to mark and check alignment and level. Why tension matters, and how it differs from a chalk line.
- concept 25 May 2026Termite-prone area A termite-prone area is a site where subterranean termites are a risk. It triggers mandatory AS 3660.1 termite management. How councils declare it and what it means.
Process
- process 11 June 2026Builders clean: scope, stages, and handover Builders clean: post-trades scope before PCI. Windows, stickers, grout haze, cabinetry, floors. Three-stage convention, who pays, and PCI impact.
- process 11 June 2026Design development stage: concept to construction-ready documentation Design development takes a concept design and resolves it into coordinated documentation. At DD (60-80% complete) D&C tenders go out and novations lock in.
- process 11 June 2026On-site wastewater: septic and AWTS systems for unsewered lots Septic tanks, AWTS, and land application areas for unsewered lots in Australia. AS/NZS 1547 design standard, council approval pathway, and builder siting rules.
- process 11 June 2026Tilt-up panel construction Tilt-up panels are cast on the slab and tilted vertical by crane. HRCW category 14, AS 3850, exclusion zones, and why props stay until the roof ties in.
Regulation
- regulation 25 May 2026Building Act 1975 (Qld): the building control framework The Building Act 1975 is Qld's building-control law: building development approvals, private building certifiers, certificates of occupancy, and enforcement via the QBCC.
- regulation 25 May 2026Building Act 1993 (Vic): the building control framework The Building Act 1993 is Victoria's building-control law: permits, surveyors, occupancy, and practitioner registration. Now administered by the BPC, not the VBA.
- regulation 25 May 2026Building Act 2011 (WA): the building control framework The Building Act 2011 is WA's building control law: building permits, certificates of design compliance, occupancy permits, and the certified vs uncertified paths.
- regulation 25 May 2026EP&A Regulation 2021 (NSW): the operational planning rules The EP&A Regulation 2021 is the NSW operational regulation under the EP&A Act 1979: DA lodgement, fees, and notification rules. It replaced the 2000 Regulation in 2022.
- regulation 25 May 2026Group F (rainforest) vegetation under AS 3959 Group F is the AS 3959 rainforest vegetation class. Where it, mangroves, or grassland under 300mm is the only nearby vegetation, NCC bushfire construction can be exempt.
- regulation 11 June 2026LUPAA: Land Use Planning and Approvals Act 1993 (Tas) LUPAA 1993 is the enabling Act for Tasmania's planning system: the TPS, four assessment categories, permit timeframes, and TASCAT appeals.
- regulation 25 May 2026Planning for Bush Fire Protection (PBP, NSW) Planning for Bush Fire Protection (PBP 2019) is the NSW RFS framework for bushfire-prone land: asset protection zones, access, water, and BAL. More than just AS 3959.
- regulation 11 June 2026SDAP: Queensland state development assessment provisions SDAP is the codified benchmark document SARA applies when a QLD DA triggers a state interest. 27 state codes cover roads, koala habitat, vegetation, waterways.
- regulation 11 June 2026ShapingSEQ: South East Queensland's regional plan ShapingSEQ 2023 sets 900,000 dwelling targets across 12 SEQ LGAs with a 60/40 infill rule. It binds council scheme amendments directly.
- regulation 11 June 2026State planning policy: the state-interest layer above council schemes A state planning policy (SPP) is a state-government instrument that sits above council schemes. SPPs prevail on inconsistency and can apply directly to DAs.
- regulation 11 June 2026State Planning Provisions (TAS): the uniform zone and code set Tasmania's SPPs are the uniform statewide set of 23 zones and 16 codes under LUPAA. All 29 councils apply them via their LPS but cannot vary them.
Material
- material 25 May 2026HomeGuard: the bifenthrin treated-sheet termite barrier HomeGuard is FMC's bifenthrin-impregnated termite barrier sheet. The 500 micron DPC variant also serves as a damp-proof course. CodeMark-certified to AS 3660.
- material 25 May 2026MDF (medium density fibreboard): uses, grades, and limits MDF is dry-process fibreboard for painted joinery, skirting, and cabinetry. It machines and paints well, but is not for structural or wet-area use.
- material 25 May 2026OSB (oriented strand board): what it is and the plywood comparison OSB (oriented strand board) is an engineered panel of cross-oriented wood strands. Mostly imported into Australia, used in I-joist webs. How it compares to plywood.
- material 25 May 2026Structural plywood grade: AS/NZS 2269, F-grades, and the stamp Structural plywood is made to AS/NZS 2269 with an F-grade and a Type A bond. How to read the stamp, what the F-grades mean, and why interior ply is not a substitute.
- material 11 June 2026uPVC windows: thermally efficient frame alternative to aluminium uPVC window frames: thermal performance vs aluminium, NatHERS ratings, AS 2047, BAL bushfire limits, cost, lead times and Australian-grade UV notes.
Glossary
- glossary 29 May 2026125 mm sphere test The 125 mm sphere test is the NCC opening rule for barriers: no opening may pass a 125 mm sphere (clause 11.3.4(4)). Where it applies and the 300 mm exception.
- glossary 25 May 2026ABCB (Australian Building Codes Board) The ABCB (Australian Building Codes Board) is the body that writes and publishes the NCC, a joint Commonwealth and state initiative. What it does for builders.
- glossary 4 May 2026ABCB Housing Provisions Standard The ABCB Housing Provisions is the standalone DTS document referenced from NCC 2022 Volume Two Section H. Holds the actual numbers builders use to comply.
- glossary 8 May 2026ABCC (Australian Building and Construction Commission) The ABCC was the dedicated federal regulator for building and construction workplace law. It was abolished on 6 February 2023. The FWO took over its functions.
- glossary 2 May 2026ABIC MW Major Works edition.
- glossary 2 May 2026ABIC SW-2018 Australian Building Industry Contract, Simple Works edition.
- glossary 10 May 2026ABN (Australian Business Number) An ABN is the unique 11-digit number that identifies your business to the ATO and your clients. Required on every invoice in construction.
- glossary 30 May 2026Acceptance window (variations) An acceptance window is the period (typically 5 working days under HIA/MBA) for an owner to sign and return a variation offer. Don't start work until it's signed back.
- glossary 24 May 2026Accepted development (Qld) Qld Planning Act 2016 category for development needing no DA. Just a Building Approval. Covers most standard houses on residential lots in compliant zones.
- glossary 14 May 2026Accredited Professional (SA) Accredited Professional is South Australia's PDI Act 2016 title for the registered certifier who issues Building Rules Consent. Four building levels explained.
- glossary 10 May 2026ACCS (Australian Carpet Classification Scheme) The ACCS is Australia's national independent carpet grading scheme. Star ratings (1 to 6) tell builders and clients how a carpet will perform in residential use.
- glossary 11 May 2026Acetoxy cure silicone Acetoxy cure silicone releases acetic acid as it cures, giving a vinegar smell. Faster and cheaper than neutral cure but not suitable on stone, copper, or brass.
- glossary 8 May 2026Acid sulfate soils What acid sulfate soils are in NSW: classes 1 to 5, how they affect CDC and DA eligibility, and what builders need to check before starting work.
- glossary 10 May 2026ACM (Asbestos-Containing Material) ACM means asbestos-containing material: any product or structure that contains asbestos. Triggers Class A or B licence requirements and HRCW SWMS obligations.
- glossary 16 May 2026Acoustic engineer Acoustic engineer designs and certifies sound insulation, typically for NCC H4P6 Performance Solutions on Class 1 attached/stacked dwellings. $3-8k typical.
- glossary 14 May 2026ACQ (Alkaline Copper Quaternary) ACQ is the arsenic-free alternative to CCA for H3 and H4 hazard classes. Standard for modern residential decking, posts, ground-contact. Builder primer.
- glossary 2 May 2026Addenda formal revisions issued during tender period.
- glossary 16 May 2026Adhesive coverage (tile install) Adhesive coverage is the percentage of tile back bonded to substrate. AS 3958 requires 80% walls, 95% floors, 100% wet areas. Below the spec, debonding follows.
- glossary 15 May 2026Adjudicate Today Adjudicate Today is the largest of seven NSW ANAs for SOPA adjudication, with fixed fees for claims under $50K and hourly rates above. No application fee.
- glossary 1 June 2026Adjudicated amount (Security of Payment) The adjudicated amount is what a Security of Payment adjudicator determines is payable, enforceable as a judgment; the respondent must pay it first and argue later.
- glossary 8 May 2026Adjudication Adjudication is the fast-track dispute resolution pathway under Australian Security of Payment Acts for unpaid progress claims and retention money.
- glossary 16 May 2026Adjudication response (SOPA) Adjudication response is the respondent's written reply under SOPA NSW s.20. Lodged within 5 business days; can only rely on reasons already in the payment schedule.
- glossary 4 June 2026Adjudicator (Security of Payment) An adjudicator is the independent person appointed to determine a Security of Payment dispute, whose determination is enforceable as a debt within days of appointment.
- glossary 9 June 2026Administrative controls Administrative controls are WHS measures that change how people work (procedures, training, signage, rosters, exclusion times) rather than removing the hazard itself.
- glossary 16 May 2026Admixture (concrete) Concrete admixtures: chemicals added at the batch plant (water reducer, superplasticiser, accelerator, retarder, fibre). Adding water on site breaks spec.
- glossary 23 May 2026Advertised development (NSW) Advertised development is a NSW DA class requiring 28-day exhibition plus newspaper notice. Sits between standard DAs (14 days) and designated development.
- glossary 8 May 2026AEP (annual exceedance probability) AEP is the probability of a storm event being exceeded in any given year. NCC 2022 replaced ARI with AEP for gutter and stormwater sizing.
- glossary 16 May 2026AFCA (Australian Financial Complaints Authority) AFCA is Australia's free external dispute resolution body. Builders escalate insurance claim denials here after IDR; 2-year limit from the final response.
- glossaryAg drain An ag drain is a perforated pipe in a gravel trench used to collect and redirect subsurface water. Common behind retaining walls and along footings.
- glossary 10 May 2026AGGA (Australian Glass and Glazing Association) AGGA is the peak industry body for glaziers and glass suppliers in Australia. The AGGA Accredited Company Program verifies AS 1288 knowledge.
- glossary 16 May 2026Aggregate (concrete) Aggregate is the coarse stone and fine sand in concrete, 60-75% of mix volume. 20 mm nominal is residential default; 10-14 mm for slim sections; 40 mm mass-concrete only.
- glossary 10 May 2026AGWA (Australian Glass and Window Association) AGWA (Australian Glass and Window Association) administers window compliance certification and the WERS energy rating scheme for Australian builders.
- glossary 10 May 2026AHD (Australian Height Datum) AHD (Australian Height Datum) is Australia's official vertical datum, referenced to mean sea level. Used for flood levels, finished floor levels, and construction surveys
- glossary 30 May 2026AHIMS (Aboriginal Heritage Information Management System) AHIMS is the NSW database of recorded Aboriginal object sites. A free basic search (200 m buffer, valid 12 months) supports the due diligence defence under the NPW Act.
- glossary 16 May 2026Air gap (backflow prevention) Air gap is a physical vertical separation between a water outlet and the highest possible flood level. Backflow protection method under AS/NZS 3500.1.
- glossary 16 May 2026Air infiltration (window / door rating) Air infiltration is the leakage through closed windows and doors at test pressure, rated under AS 2047. Lower values mean better NCC 2022 thermal envelope.
- glossary 30 May 2026Air monitoring (asbestos) Asbestos air monitoring samples airborne fibre levels by a licensed assessor during and after Class A removal; clearance needs a result below 0.01 fibres/mL.
- glossary 29 May 2026Airborne sound Airborne sound is air-borne noise (speech, music, TV) crossing a building element. Rated by Rw and Rw+Ctr under AS/NZS ISO 717.1. Distinct from impact sound.
- glossary 9 May 2026Allotment An allotment is a defined parcel of land. In the NCC it drives Class 1b holiday accommodation (four+ dwellings per allotment) and Class 1a vs Class 2.
- glossary 2 May 2026Allowance looser term often used loosely; can mean PC or PS.
- glossary 1 June 2026Amenity provisions (NCC) Amenity provisions are the NCC rules for a habitable room's livability: minimum ceiling height, natural light and ventilation, which non-habitable spaces need not meet.
- glossary 8 May 2026AMR (Automatic Mutual Recognition) AMR lets a licensed tradesperson or contractor work in another state or territory without a second licence application. Some construction occupations are exempt.
- glossary 10 May 2026ANA (Authorised Nominating Authority) An Authorised Nominating Authority (ANA) receives SOPA adjudication applications and appoints an independent adjudicator to determine payment disputes in NSW.
- glossary 28 May 2026ANEF (Australian Noise Exposure Forecast) ANEF is the endorsed aircraft noise contour around AU airports. Residential is generally refused inside the 20 or 25 ANEF contour. Why it matters at lot purchase.
- glossary 14 May 2026annealed glass Annealed glass is standard non-safety float glass. Permitted by AS 1288 outside impact zones, replaced with toughened or laminated in shower screens and doors.
- glossary 3 June 2026Annual turnover policy (construction works) An annual turnover policy is construction-works insurance covering all of a builder's projects up to an annual turnover limit, an alternative to single-project policies.
- glossary 14 May 2026Anti-capillary fold An anti-capillary fold is a small backward fold on the uphill edge of a flashing that breaks the capillary path of water. NCC Part 7.2 requires it with 75 mm overlap.
- glossary 10 May 2026Apprentice Connect Australia Apprentice Connect Australia providers replaced the old AASN from 1 July 2024. They handle training contract registration and subsidy claims for employers. Free service.
- glossary 10 May 2026APVMA APVMA: Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority. Registers chemical termiticides used in pre-construction soil treatment. NCC 2022 HP 3.4.2 requires APVMA
- glossary 16 May 2026Arborist report (DA submission) Arborist report is a qualified arborist's DA-submission assessment of trees on or adjoining a site: health, structure, retention value, impact, TPZ design.
- glossary 24 May 2026Architect-administered contract An architect-administered contract is one where the architect administers the contract: certifying payments, variations and EOTs as an impartial third party.
- glossary 16 May 2026Argon fill (IGU) Argon gas fills the cavity in an insulated glass unit. Lower conductivity than air cuts U-value 10-20%. Leaks ~1% per year; quality IGUs retain 80%+ at 20 years.
- glossary 8 May 2026Articulation joint Articulation joint: a vertical movement control joint built into masonry walls to accommodate thermal and moisture movement. Required under NCC Housing Provisions 5.6.8.
- glossary 14 May 2026AS 1720 AS 1720 is the Australian Standard for timber structures: design methods, joint capacities, engineered timber. AS 1720.1:2010 is the design code.
- glossary 29 May 2026AS 2050 AS 2050:2018 Installation of roof tiles is the Australian Standard for tile fixing, sarking, ridges, and flashings on residential pitched-tile roofs.
- glossary 2 May 2026AS 2589 finish levels (Levels 1 to 5) AS 2589 defines five plasterboard finish levels. Level 4 is typical residential paint-grade. Level 5 is required for critical light or high-gloss finishes.
- glossary 14 May 2026AS 3786 AS 3786 is the Australian Standard for residential smoke alarms. NCC Housing Provisions Part 9.5 calls it up; Queensland mandates photoelectric-only by 2027.
- glossary 11 June 2026AS 4312: atmospheric corrosivity zones in Australia AS 4312:2019 maps Australian atmospheric corrosivity zones C1 to CX, setting steel coating grades, fastener specs, and product warranties.
- glossary 13 May 2026AS 4654: External above-ground waterproofing membranes AS 4654 is the Australian standard for external above-ground waterproofing. Part 1 covers materials, Part 2 covers design and installation. NCC H2D8 DTS path.
- glossary 11 June 2026AS 5203: the test standard for child window restrictors AS 5203:2016 sets the test sequence for child window restrictors and safety screens, called up by NCC Housing Provisions Part 11.5.
- glossary 2 May 2026AS standards Australian Standards referenced throughout NCC (e.g.
- glossary 15 May 2026As-built drawing An as-built drawing records what was actually constructed, including variations from design. Required at handover. Basis for future renovation and defect investigation.
- glossary 13 May 2026AS/NZS 2904: Damp-proof courses and flashings AS/NZS 2904 is the Australian standard for DPC and flashing materials. Covers 5 material classes. Called up by NCC ABCB Housing Provisions Part 5.7.
- glossary 12 May 2026AS/NZS 3500.3: Stormwater drainage AS/NZS 3500.3 is the Australian standard for residential stormwater drainage. Covers roof, surface and subsoil drainage. Licensed plumber work, not builder-DIY.
- glossary 11 June 2026AS/NZS 3679.1: the hot-rolled structural steel standard (Grade 300) AS/NZS 3679.1:2016 specifies hot-rolled structural steel bars and sections. Grade 300 is the default supply grade for UB, UC, and PFC sections.
- glossary 14 May 2026AS/NZS 5601 AS/NZS 5601 is the joint Australia and NZ gas installation standard. Gasfitters install under 5601.1:2022 and issue the gas Certificate of Compliance.
- glossary 30 May 2026Asbestos clearance certificate An asbestos clearance certificate is the assessor's sign-off that an area is safe to re-occupy after asbestos removal; Class A needs air monitoring under 0.01 fibres/mL.
- glossary 25 May 2026Asbestos register An asbestos register records the asbestos identified at a workplace, its location and condition. Mandatory for workplaces with asbestos; review before demolition.
- glossary 26 May 2026ASC NEPM: the national site-contamination measure The ASC NEPM 2013 is Australia's national site-contamination measure, setting the HIL/EIL/GIL investigation levels every state contamination regime screens against.
- glossary 1 June 2026Assessable development Assessable development is development that needs a formal planning approval (code or impact assessment), unlike accepted or exempt development that needs none.
- glossary 1 June 2026Assessment manager The assessment manager is the authority (usually council) that assesses and decides a development application in the Queensland and South Australian planning systems.
- glossary 1 June 2026Assessment pathway The assessment pathway is how development is assessed, exempt, complying/code (fast certifier track), or merit DA, which sets who decides it and how long it takes.
- glossary 30 May 2026Asset Protection Zone (APZ) An asset protection zone (APZ) is a managed low-fuel buffer between a building and bushfire-prone vegetation that cuts the radiant heat and ember attack in a fire.
- glossary 16 May 2026ASSMP (Acid Sulfate Soils Management Plan) ASSMP is the Acid Sulfate Soils Management Plan required by NSW councils on Class 1/2 land and on Class 3/4 land where excavation exceeds the trigger depth.
- glossary 16 May 2026Atmospheric monitoring (confined space) Atmospheric monitoring is continuous measurement of O2, LEL, CO and H2S throughout a confined-space entry. AS/NZS 2865 mandates it where hazards may change.
- glossary 25 May 2026ATO (Australian Taxation Office) The ATO is the federal tax administrator: ABN, GST, BAS, PAYG, super guarantee. How builders interact with it, and why it is not the GTO or RTO.
- glossary 30 May 2026Attic (planning: attic vs storey) In planning, an attic is a non-habitable roof void that does not count as a storey under height limits but still sits within the HOB envelope.
- glossary 15 May 2026Australian Institute of Architects (AIA) AIA is the peak body for Australian architects. Co-publishes ABIC contracts with MBA, runs Acumen practice notes. Builders meet AIA via ABIC contract administration.
- glossary 14 May 2026Autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) AAC is lightweight cellular concrete used in shower hobs, separating walls, and cladding. Covered by AS 5146 series. Common brands: Hebel, AFS.
- glossary 15 May 2026Averaged ground level (AS 4055) Averaged ground level is the AS 4055:2021 reference datum for 6.0 m eaves and 8.5 m roof-peak limits. On a sloping block, it differs from any one corner's natural level.
- glossary 5 May 2026Back-blocking Back-blocking adds a short strip of plasterboard glued behind a butt joint to reduce telegraphing of the joint under raking light. Used on critical-light walls.
- glossary 10 May 2026Back-butter Back-butter: applying tile adhesive to the back of a tile before pressing it to the substrate. Required for large-format tiles and stone to achieve full adhesive coverage
- glossary 14 May 2026Backer rod A backer rod is a closed-cell foam rod inserted into a sealant joint before gunning. Sets the back surface and depth-to-width ratio so sealant flexes correctly.
- glossary 8 May 2026Backflow prevention Backflow prevention stops contaminated water from flowing back into the potable supply. Required under AS/NZS 3500.1 on residential builds.
- glossary 2 May 2026BAL bushfire risk rating; drives material specs in bushfire-prone zones.
- glossary 1 June 2026Ballasted roof A ballasted roof is a flat-roof membrane laid loose and held against wind uplift by gravel or pavers on top, leaving the membrane accessible for inspection.
- glossary 30 May 2026Balloon framing Balloon framing ran wall studs full height from floor to roof, with floors hung off them. Australia replaced it with platform framing for fire safety and handling.
- glossary 8 May 2026Balustrade Balustrade: the railing system required on decks and balconies where there is a fall of 1 m or more. NCC 2022 sets minimum height at 1,000 mm.
- glossary 24 May 2026Bank guarantee (as contract security) A bank guarantee is an unconditional, on-demand bank undertaking held in place of cash retention as security for a builder's performance. Frees up cashflow.
- glossary 10 May 2026Bar chair Bar chairs are plastic or steel supports that hold reinforcing mesh at the correct height before concrete is poured, maintaining the required concrete cover.
- glossary 10 May 2026Barn door A barn door is a surface-mounted sliding door on a wall-face track. No cavity needed, but requires clear wall space beside the opening and cannot seal fully.
- glossary 10 May 2026BAS (Business Activity Statement) A BAS is the form GST-registered businesses lodge with the ATO to report and pay GST, PAYG withholding, and other tax obligations.
- glossary 14 May 2026BAS agent A BAS agent is a registered tax practitioner who can prepare and lodge a Business Activity Statement. Engaging one extends the ATO lodgment date for the business.
- glossary 2 May 2026BASIX NSW thermal/water/energy assessment.
- glossary 24 May 2026Batching plant (concrete) A batching plant produces ready-mix concrete by weighing and mixing aggregates, cement, water and admixtures, then loads agitator trucks. AS 1379 governs supply.
- glossary 8 May 2026Batten A batten is a lightweight timber or steel member fixed over rafters to carry roofing sheets or tiles. Size and spacing are set by span tables and wind class.
- glossaryBatter A batter is the sloped face of a cut or fill embankment on a residential site. Maximum ratios are set by NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 3.2 Table 3.2.1 by soil class.
- glossary 23 May 2026Battle-axe lot Battle-axe lot has a long narrow handle leading to a wider rear pad. The handle is excluded from FSR and site area; only the pad counts. Common in suburban infill.
- glossary 7 May 2026BCA (Building Code of Australia) The BCA is Volumes One and Two of the NCC. Volume One covers commercial and multi-residential buildings; Volume Two covers houses and sheds.
- glossary 9 May 2026BCITF Levy (Construction Training Fund WA) What the BCITF levy is in WA: a training levy on building work over $20,000 ex-GST, paid at permit stage to the Construction Training Fund.
- glossary 10 May 2026BDAA (Building Designers Association of Australia) BDAA is the national industry body for accredited building designers in Australia. Accreditation signals education, experience, and PI insurance standards.
- glossary 4 June 2026Bearer A bearer is the main horizontal framing member spanning between posts or stumps that carries the floor or deck joists, sized from the AS 1684 span tables.
- glossary 24 May 2026Bearing capacity Bearing capacity is the maximum pressure soil can carry before it fails or over-settles. It sets footing size, and comes from the geotech soil report (in kPa).
- glossary 15 May 2026Bearing strata Bearing strata is the soil layer with adequate capacity to support footing loads. Identified by geotech; drives pier depth, pad sizing, and footing design under AS 2870.
- glossary 14 May 2026Bed joint The bed joint is the horizontal mortar joint under each course of brick or block. Standard 10 mm, fully filled across the full brick width.
- glossary 8 May 2026Bedding sand Bedding sand is the 30 mm layer of coarse washed concrete sand laid over the sub-base before segmental pavers. Spec per AS 3727.1:2016.
- glossary 30 May 2026Benchtop A benchtop is the work surface on kitchen, vanity, or laundry cabinetry. Engineered stone benchtops are banned in Australia from 1 July 2024 over silicosis risk.
- glossary 16 May 2026BIF Act (Qld Building Industry Fairness) BIF Act is the common acronym for Queensland's Building Industry Fairness (Security of Payment) Act 2017. Covers payment claims, adjudication and project trusts.
- glossary 10 May 2026Birdsmouth A birdsmouth is the notch cut in a rafter where it bears on the wall plate. AS 1684.2 limits the depth to preserve the rafter's structural section.
- glossary 1 June 2026Blinding concrete Blinding concrete is a thin low-strength layer cast over prepared ground to seal the surface, give a clean working level, and protect reo before the structural pour.
- glossary 29 May 2026BlueScope BlueScope is Australia's largest steel manufacturer and the parent of Colorbond, Zincalume, Truecore, Galvaspan, and Lysaght. The brand-family map for builders.
- glossary 10 May 2026BMT (Bare Metal Thickness) BMT is the thickness of steel sheet measured without any coating. Used to specify light gauge steel studs, roofing, and cladding in Australian residential construction.
- glossary 29 May 2026Boarding house (Class 1b) A boarding house is NCC Class 1b: shared lodging for up to 12 unrelated occupants. Stricter smoke alarms, fire separation, plus NSW Housing SEPP land-use controls.
- glossary 4 June 2026Bodily injury liability Bodily injury liability is physical injury to a third party from building operations, the core trigger for a public-liability claim, distinct from property damage.
- glossary 8 May 2026Bond breaker A bond breaker is a material applied at movement joints in wet areas to allow independent substrate movement without tearing the waterproofing membrane.
- glossary 24 May 2026Boom pump (concrete) A concrete boom pump is a truck-mounted pump with an articulated placing boom that delivers concrete over height and distance. How it differs from a line pump.
- glossary 10 May 2026Bored pier Bored pier: a drilled in-situ concrete deep foundation for reactive and poor-soil residential sites. Extends to competent bearing strata below problem layers.
- glossary 24 May 2026Borehole A borehole is a drilled hole that samples and logs soil at depth for the geotech, reaching deeper than a test pit. It feeds the bore log and AS 2870 site class.
- glossary 10 May 2026Borelog A borelog records the soil profile from surface to depth: soil type, consistency, groundwater level, and fill. Used in AS 1726:2017 geotech reports.
- glossary 1 June 2026Bottom chord (truss) The bottom chord is the lower continuous member of a truss, in tension under gravity load and usually carrying the ceiling; single-point lifting can damage long trusses.
- glossary 24 May 2026Bottom plate The bottom plate is the horizontal member fixed to the slab that studs stand on, and the first link in the tie-down chain. How it's fixed under AS 1684.
- glossary 7 May 2026BPAD BPAD is the accreditation scheme for bushfire consultants in Australia. A BPAD Level 1 assessor determines the BAL rating required before a DA or building permit.
- glossary 8 May 2026BPC (Building and Plumbing Commission) The BPC (Building and Plumbing Commission) is Victoria's combined building regulator, dispute resolution body, and domestic building insurer from 1 July 2025.
- glossary 29 May 2026BPC portal (Victoria) The BPC portal is the Victorian Building and Plumbing Commission's online interface for registration, renewals, CPD, and DBI lodgement (formerly the VBA portal).
- glossary 25 May 2026Bracing capacity Bracing capacity is the racking resistance a bracing element or wall provides (kN/m) under AS 1684. It must meet or exceed the bracing demand for each wall line.
- glossary 10 May 2026Bracing schedule A bracing schedule lists every bracing panel in a timber-framed building: location, type, length, and capacity. Required on site at the frame inspection.
- glossary 29 May 2026Breaking-surf zone The breaking-surf zone is the ~1 km strip from breaking waves with the highest salt aerosol load. Triggers Grade 316L wall ties and the strictest corrosion specs.
- glossary 7 May 2026Brick gauge Brick gauge: the height of one brick course including the mortar bed joint. Standard clay brick gauge is 86mm (76mm brick + 10mm bed joint), a workmanship standard.
- glossary 15 May 2026Bridging (termite barrier) Bridging is the termite-barrier failure mode where soil, mulch, render, or paving sits above the barrier, giving termites a concealed entry path past it.
- glossary 10 May 2026Broadloom Broadloom is carpet manufactured in wide rolls (typically 3.66 m or 4 m), installed wall-to-wall. The standard supply form for residential carpet in Australia.
- glossary 16 May 2026Broom finish (concrete) Broom finish is the linear-textured concrete surface produced by dragging a stiff broom across screeded fresh concrete. Standard external slip-resistance method.
- glossary 2 June 2026Buckling Buckling is the sudden sideways or local deformation of a slender member under compression, the failure mode that governs cold-formed steel and slender columns.
- glossary 10 May 2026Bugle head Bugle head: concave-tapered screw head that auto-countersinks without tearing plasterboard paper or timber. Standard for plasterboard and decking screws.
- glossary 10 June 2026Buildability Buildability (constructability) is how practically, safely and economically a design can be built with available trades and methods, a risk the builder prices in.
- glossary 30 May 2026Builders margin Builders margin is the percentage a builder adds to direct cost on a variation or PC/PS excess. Under HIA it defaults to 20% on excess and must be set in the contract.
- glossary 24 May 2026Building and Development Certifiers Act 2018 (NSW) The NSW Act that registers and regulates certifiers (building surveyors, pool and subdivision certifiers). Replaced the Building Professionals Act 2005.
- glossary 23 May 2026Building and Energy (WA) Building and Energy is the WA regulator administering the Building Act 2011, registering builders and surveyors, and overseeing the WA Home Indemnity scheme.
- glossary 4 June 2026Building approval (QLD) A QLD building approval is the Building Act 1975 sign-off by a building certifier confirming work meets the NCC. It's always needed for a house, even with no planning DA.
- glossary 25 May 2026Building Commission NSW Building Commission NSW is the NSW building regulator: it licenses builders and trades, inspects residential work, and took over building from NSW Fair Trading in 2023.
- glossary 1 June 2026Building envelope (planning) A building envelope is the buildable volume left on a lot after setbacks, height limits and overlays, the 3D box a design must fit before anything is drawn.
- glossary 10 June 2026Building estimate A building estimate is the builder's detailed cost build-up (materials, labour, subbies, overhead, margin) behind a quote, not the price the client sees.
- glossary 30 May 2026Building fabric The building fabric is a home's thermal shell (walls, roof, floor, glazing) whose insulation and sealing the NatHERS rating and elemental DTS energy provisions assess.
- glossary 11 June 2026Building indemnity insurance (SA) Building indemnity insurance is SA's mandatory last-resort home warranty cover ($250,000) for domestic contracts over $20,000 requiring development approval.
- glossary 29 May 2026Building line A building line is the line beyond which no building may occur, set by the LEP, DCP or covenant. Distinct from title boundary; sets the front and side setback.
- glossary 25 May 2026Building order (Victoria) A building order is a written directive a Victorian building surveyor issues under the Building Act 1993 to fix, stop, or carry out work. Non-compliance is an offence.
- glossary 8 May 2026Building practitioner (NSW DBP Act) A registered building practitioner under NSW's DBP Act is a builder with registration, insurance, and compliance declaration duties on regulated buildings.
- glossary 1 June 2026Building registration (VIC/WA) Building registration is the VIC and WA term for the authority to contract for and supervise residential building work, the equivalent of a contractor licence elsewhere.
- glossary 16 May 2026Building Rules Consent (SA) Building Rules Consent is the SA building approval under PDI Act 2016. Issued by council or Accredited Professional. SA equivalent of NSW CC and Vic Building Permit.
- glossary 9 May 2026Building Services Levy (WA) What the Building Services Levy is in WA: a 0.137% levy on building permits over $45,000, collected by local government and remitted to DEMIRS.
- glossary 30 May 2026Building work supervisor (SA) Building work supervisor registration (SA): a credential under the Building Work Contractors Act 1995 authorising a person to supervise building work on site.
- glossary 1 June 2026Built-up roofing Built-up roofing is a flat-roof system of two or more bonded plies (base sheet plus cap sheet) that gives redundancy, the standard for podium decks over habitable space.
- glossary 16 May 2026Bulk insulation Bulk insulation resists heat flow by trapping still air in fibre (glasswool, polyester, wool) or foam. R-value derives from thickness. Standard ceiling/wall insulation.
- glossary 15 May 2026Bushfire Management Overlay (BMO, Victoria) The BMO is a Victorian planning overlay (VPP Clause 44.06) triggering a planning permit with CFA referral and Bushfire Management Plan, on top of the building permit.
- glossary 14 May 2026Bushfire Management Plan (BMP) A BMP is the site-specific bushfire plan covering defendable space, water supply, access, vegetation. Required by VIC BMO and NSW bushfire-prone land assessments.
- glossary 14 May 2026Bushfire-prone area (BPA) Bushfire-prone area is a state-mapped designation that triggers NCC H7P5 and AS 3959 construction. Distinct from planning overlays like Victoria's BMO.
- glossary 26 May 2026Bushfire-resisting timber Bushfire-resisting timber is the seven AS 3959 Appendix F species allowed unprotected on exposed elements up to BAL-29. At BAL-40 and FZ, timber alone is not enough.
- glossary 16 May 2026Business day (Australian building law) A 'business day' under Australian SOP Acts excludes weekends, state public holidays, and (Vic) the Christmas-New Year shutdown. The unit every SOP deadline counts in.
- glossary 10 May 2026Butt hinge A butt hinge is the standard recessed hinge for swinging doors in residential construction. Internal doors use two or three 100mm butt hinges per leaf.
- glossary 1 June 2026C-section (steel) A C-section is a cold-formed steel lipped channel, the workhorse stud, joist and plate in light-gauge steel framing, roll-formed from galvanised coil to AS/NZS 4600.
- glossary 1 June 2026Cap sheet A cap sheet is the top, often mineral-surfaced or foil-faced, ply of a torch-on modified-bitumen roof, fused over the base sheet as the weathering surface.
- glossary 16 May 2026Capillary action (roofing) Capillary action is water travelling against gravity through a thin gap. The failure mode behind metal roof side-lap leaks below minimum pitch and tile head-lap leaks.
- glossary 30 May 2026Carbonation Carbonation is cement-based materials reacting with atmospheric CO2 over time: it heals lime mortar, shrinks concrete masonry, and can corrode rebar it reaches.
- glossary 10 May 2026Carcass A carcass is the structural box body of a cabinet, without doors, drawers or benchtop. Used in kitchen, bathroom and wardrobe cabinetmaking.
- glossary 11 June 2026Casement window A casement window is side-hinged and opens outward. Better air-infiltration seal than sliding types, controlled by friction stays under AS 2047.
- glossary 23 May 2026Cash basis (GST and accounting) Cash basis GST is the ATO election where GST liability triggers on cash received, not invoice issued. Available up to $10M turnover. Strongly preferred for builders.
- glossary 1 June 2026Catchment area (roof drainage) A catchment area is the plan area of roof draining to a given gutter or downpipe; with rainfall intensity it sizes the drainage under AS/NZS 3500.3 and the NCC.
- glossary 1 June 2026Category 1 offence (WHS) A Category 1 offence is the gravest WHS Act offence: reckless conduct by a duty holder exposing a person to death or serious injury, carrying fines and jail.
- glossary 14 May 2026Category 3 WHS offence A Category 3 WHS offence is failure to comply with a safety duty where no person was exposed to death or serious injury. The lowest of three tiers under s 33.
- glossary 1 June 2026Caveat A caveat is a notice lodged on a property title by someone claiming an interest; it blocks sale, mortgage or subdivision being registered until it's resolved.
- glossary 8 May 2026Cavity masonry Cavity masonry: two masonry leaves separated by a clear cavity of 35-75 mm, tied together with wall ties. Used for thermal, acoustic, and moisture performance.
- glossary 10 May 2026Cavity slider A cavity slider is a door that retracts fully into a wall cavity on a concealed track. The pocket frame goes in at first fix before sheeting.
- glossary 8 May 2026CBOS (Consumer, Building and Occupational Services) CBOS is the Tasmanian government body that licences builders and plumbers, administers CPD requirements, and handles occupational licensing complaints.
- glossaryCBS (Consumer and Business Services, SA) CBS is South Australia's building regulator. It issues and renews building work contractor licences under the Building Work Contractors Act 1995 (SA).
- glossary 7 May 2026CC (Construction Certificate) What a Construction Certificate is in NSW, who issues it, when it is required after DA approval, and when a CDC bypasses it entirely.
- glossary 14 May 2026CCA (Copper Chrome Arsenate) CCA is a water-borne timber preservative for H3-H5 hazard classes. Contains arsenic; APVMA restricted from 2006 for high-contact uses. Builder primer on safe use.
- glossary 5 May 2026CCEW (Certificate of Compliance for Electrical Work, NSW) The CCEW is the NSW form of electrical Certificate of Compliance, issued by a licensed contractor for new or altered electrical wiring work.
- glossary 7 May 2026CDC (Complying Development Certificate) What a CDC is in NSW: a fast-track planning and construction approval for eligible residential work. Issued by a certifier, not council.
- glossary 25 May 2026CEC accreditation (now Solar Accreditation Australia) CEC accreditation lets a solar installer sign off a PV system for STCs. Since May 2024 it is run by Solar Accreditation Australia (SAA), not the CEC.
- glossary 16 May 2026Ceiling joist Ceiling joist is the horizontal timber member between wall top plates at ceiling level supporting the ceiling lining. AS 1684 span tables; typical 90x45 at 450/600 crs.
- glossary 25 May 2026Cemintel Cemintel is a major Australian fibre cement cladding brand (a CSR brand, part of Saint-Gobain). Its range and how it compares to James Hardie's Scyon.
- glossary 9 May 2026Certificate of consent (VIC owner-builder) A certificate of consent is issued by the Victorian Building and Plumbing Commission before an owner-builder can apply for a building permit on work above $16,000.
- glossary 9 May 2026Certificate of Construction Compliance (WA) What a Certificate of Construction Compliance (BA17) is in WA: the building surveyor's sign-off that work matches the permit, required before an occupancy permit.
- glossary 29 May 2026Certificate of currency (insurance) A certificate of currency confirms an active insurance policy: type, limit, expiry, named insured. Builders sight subbie PL and workers comp before site access.
- glossary 9 May 2026Certificate of Design Compliance (WA) What a Certificate of Design Compliance (BA3) is in WA: a registered building surveyor's sign-off that a design meets building standards before permit lodgement.
- glossary 23 May 2026Certificate of Final Inspection (CFI, Vic) Vic Building Act 1993 certificate issued by RBS at completion of Class 1a residential. Distinct from Occupancy Permit (Class 2+). The Vic completion document for houses.
- glossary 16 May 2026Certificate of occupancy (cross-state) Certificate of occupancy is the cross-state term for the final document allowing a building to be lawfully occupied: OC in NSW, OP in Vic, Form 21 in Qld.
- glossary 1 June 2026Certified application (WA building permit) A certified application is the WA building-permit path (BA1/BA3) lodged with a surveyor's certificate of design compliance, faster than the uncertified BA2 path.
- glossary 5 May 2026CES (Certificate of Electrical Safety, Victoria) The CES is Victoria's electrical Certificate of Compliance, lodged with Energy Safe Victoria by the REC at the end of every electrical installation.
- glossary 1 June 2026Change of use Change of use is changing what a building is used for (shed to dwelling, shop to cafe), which can change its NCC class and trigger approval and new compliance standards.
- glossary 30 May 2026Characteristic strength Characteristic strength is the 28-day compressive strength a concrete grade is set to, the '32' in N32; a statistical value the supplier guarantees, not the average.
- glossary 16 May 2026Characteristic surface movement (ys) Characteristic surface movement (ys) is the millimetres of seasonal soil movement on a reactive site. Drives AS 2870 site class A through P and footing design.
- glossary 14 May 2026Chart of accounts (builder) The chart of accounts is the list of income, expense, asset, liability, and equity codes in a builder's accounting system. Builder-specific COA tips.
- glossary 11 May 2026Chemical anchor A post-installed anchor using epoxy, hybrid resin, or polyester capsule to bond a threaded rod into concrete. AS 5216:2021. Hole prep is critical.
- glossary 29 May 2026Chemical soil termite barrier A chemical soil termite barrier is a termiticide-treated soil zone (bifenthrin, fipronil) forming the chemical route under AS 3660.1 vs a physical barrier.
- glossary 1 June 2026Claimant (Security of Payment) Under Security of Payment law the claimant is the party who serves a payment claim (builder, subcontractor, supplier) and can apply for adjudication if unpaid.
- glossary 8 May 2026Claims-made policy A claims-made policy only covers claims lodged while the policy is active, not when the work was done. Lapsing PI after project completion leaves you exposed.
- glossary 16 May 2026Class 10b (NCC) Class 10b under NCC is the building class for non-building structures: pool barriers, retaining walls, free-standing walls, masts, antennas. NCC H7 applies.
- glossary 14 May 2026Class 1a building Class 1a is the NCC classification for a single dwelling: house, terrace, townhouse, villa. Sits in NCC Volume Two with the ABCB Housing Provisions.
- glossary 15 May 2026Class 3 coating (AS 3566 fasteners) Class 3 (AS 3566.2) is the corrosion classification for fasteners in moderate-exposure environments. Required for treated timber, wet areas, mild coastal.
- glossary 1 June 2026Class 4 dwelling (NCC) A Class 4 dwelling is a sole residence within a Class 5-9 commercial building (a caretaker's flat above a shop), with residential amenity and fire requirements.
- glossaryClass P site A Class P site under AS 2870:2011 has problematic conditions (uncontrolled fill, soft soils, poor drainage). Standard deemed-to-comply slab designs cannot be used.
- glossary 15 May 2026Clause 4.6 variation (NSW LEP) Clause 4.6 of a NSW LEP lets council approve a DA that doesn't comply with a development standard (height, FSR, setback). 2023 reform plain-English explainer.
- glossary 15 May 2026Clear opening (door) Clear opening is the unobstructed width through a fully-opened door, face-of-door to face-of-frame-stop. NCC H8 spec'd in clear opening, not door leaf size.
- glossary 15 May 2026Clear span Clear span is the face-to-face distance between supports, the measurement AS 1684 span tables use. Measuring to the wrong point causes undersized members.
- glossary 15 May 2026Climate zone (NCC) NCC defines 8 climate zones (1 hot humid to 8 alpine). Look up by postcode at the ABCB. Drives insulation R-values, glazing, condensation and energy compliance.
- glossary 1 June 2026Closed-cell foam Closed-cell foam (EPS, XPS, PIR, phenolic) is rigid insulation of sealed gas-filled cells: high R per mm, compressive strength, and low vapour permeability.
- glossary 16 May 2026CMU (concrete masonry unit) CMU is a concrete masonry unit. Hollow cores can be filled with concrete and steel for structural capacity. Standard 200/300/400 series. Distinct from clay brick.
- glossary 10 May 2026Coach screw Coach screw: heavy-duty hex-head timber fastener driven with a wrench. Needs a pilot hole. Standard alternative is a structural screw. AS 1720.1.
- glossary 3 June 2026Coastal exposure Coastal exposure is the severity of a salt-laden marine environment, which sets steel coating grade, fixings and warranties (such as Colorbond standard versus Ultra).
- glossary 1 June 2026Code assessable Code assessable development is the QLD/SA track assessed only against the scheme's coded standards, usually without public notification, unlike impact assessable.
- glossary 23 May 2026Code Assessed Performance Assessed (SA) South Australian Planning and Design Code assessment category for proposals that miss DTS but can be approved against performance outcomes. Includes public notice.
- glossary 10 May 2026CodeMark CodeMark: ABCB-accredited product certification showing a building product or system meets NCC performance requirements. Used for termite barriers, glass, cladding.
- glossary 7 May 2026Cold joint A cold joint is a structural discontinuity in concrete caused by a pour being stopped and restarted after the first batch has begun to set. A defect, not a feature.
- glossary 10 May 2026Colorbond Colorbond is a pre-painted steel sheeting used for metal roofing, wall cladding, fencing, and rainwater goods. The dominant metal roofing product on Australian residentia
- glossary 25 May 2026Comcare: the Commonwealth WHS and workers' comp regulator Comcare is the federal WHS regulator and workers' comp insurer for Commonwealth workplaces, separate from state regulators. When a builder actually deals with it.
- glossary 14 May 2026Commissioning Commissioning is the final pre-handover stage testing every installed system. What gets commissioned, who signs, and the paperwork that lands in the build pack.
- glossary 30 May 2026Common property Common property is everything outside individual lot boundaries in a strata scheme, owned collectively by the owners corporation or body corporate.
- glossary 25 May 2026Common stud A common stud is the full-height vertical member at standard spacing in a timber wall, carrying load between the top and bottom plates. How it is sized under AS 1684.
- glossary 23 May 2026Community Participation Plan (CPP, NSW) Every NSW council's CPP under EP&A Act Schedule 1 sets notification, exhibition periods (14-28 days), site signs, and ads for each development class.
- glossary 16 May 2026Competent person (WHS) Competent person under WHS Regulations has the training, knowledge, and experience to do a specific task safely. Not a licence. Required for permits, inspections, HRCW.
- glossary 15 May 2026Compliance declaration (NSW DBP Act) NSW DBP Act compliance declaration: a registered practitioner's statutory statement that a regulated design or building work complies with the BCA.
- glossary 16 May 2026Compliance pathway (NCC) Every NCC Performance Requirement can be met by DTS, a Performance Solution, or a blend. Pick the pathway before design starts to avoid late-build reopening.
- glossary 15 May 2026Complying development (CDC) vs Development Application (DA) CDC: 20-business-day target, certifier-only. DA: 4-month typical, council assessment. CDC is fast-track for compliant builds; DA is mandatory for variations.
- glossary 8 May 2026Composite decking Composite decking: wood-plastic composite (WPC) boards used as an alternative to timber for residential decks. Common brands in Australia: Modwood, Trex, Ekodeck.
- glossary 24 May 2026Conciliation (residential building disputes) Conciliation is a facilitated, confidential step to settle a building dispute before a tribunal. In Victoria it's a mandatory gateway before VCAT.
- glossary 11 June 2026Conciliation conference (tribunal and court dispute resolution) A conciliation conference is a facilitated, without-prejudice settlement step before a tribunal or court hearing. Most Class 1 L&E Court appeals resolve here.
- glossary 9 June 2026Concrete block A concrete block is a hollow concrete masonry unit (besser block) laid in mortar, often grouted and reinforced, used for retaining, garage and load-bearing walls.
- glossary 14 May 2026Concrete cover Concrete cover is minimum distance from concrete surface to reinforcement face. AS 3600 sets by exposure class. Insufficient cover causes rust staining.
- glossary 10 May 2026Concrete grade N20, N25, N32: the number is the characteristic compressive strength in MPa at 28 days. N20 is the minimum for residential footings under the NCC Housing Provisions.
- glossary 1 June 2026Concrete stump A concrete stump is the post carrying a raised subfloor's bearers down to a pad footing, common in older VIC/QLD homes; replacing failed stumps is restumping.
- glossary 7 May 2026Concretor A concretor is a trade specialist who places, finishes, and cures concrete for slabs, footings, paths, and driveways in Australian residential construction.
- glossary 9 May 2026Concurrence (NSW planning) NSW planning concurrence: a state agency must agree before council approves a DA. Distinct from integrated development GTAs. Covers roads, biodiversity and bushfire.
- glossary 16 May 2026Conditions of consent Conditions of consent is the schedule attached to every DA or CDC listing the applicant's obligations across pre-CC, construction, and post-OC stages.
- glossary 14 May 2026Confined space A confined space is an enclosed area not designed for human occupancy with restricted entry and possible harmful atmosphere. WHS Reg Ch 4 Part 4.3 + AS 2865 apply.
- glossary 30 May 2026Consent authority The consent authority is the body (usually council, sometimes a panel) that determines a development application and enforces its conditions, distinct from the certifier.
- glossary 3 June 2026Conservation management plan A conservation management plan sets out a heritage place's significance and the policies for managing change to it, relied on when seeking approval for works.
- glossary 14 May 2026Construction Certificate (NSW) A Construction Certificate (CC) is the NSW certificate issued after DA approval, before construction. Confirms documentation meets DA conditions and the NCC.
- glossary 29 May 2026Construction induction training Construction induction training is the nationally recognised CPCWHS1001 course every worker entering an Australian construction site must complete. White Card issues.
- glossary 8 May 2026Construction joint A construction joint is a planned interface between two successive concrete pours. Reinforcement must continue through it unless the engineer details otherwise.
- glossary 25 May 2026Construction Occupations (Licensing) Act 2004 (ACT) COLA is the ACT statute licensing builders, surveyors, plumbers and electricians via the Construction Occupations Registrar. Carpenters aren't licensed in the ACT.
- glossary 15 May 2026Construction Occupations Registrar (ACT) The ACT Construction Occupations Registrar operates through Access Canberra under the Construction Occupations (Licensing) Act 2004: licensing, register, demerit points.
- glossary 30 May 2026Construction programme A construction programme is the project time schedule (trade sequence, durations, dependencies, critical path). It is the evidence any extension-of-time claim depends on.
- glossary 15 May 2026Consumer Affairs Victoria (CAV) Consumer Affairs Victoria administers Vic domestic building contract law: cooling-off, deposit limits, progress payments, the Consumer Building Guide.
- glossary 16 May 2026Consumer Building Guide (NSW) Consumer Building Guide is the NSW Fair Trading consumer-rights document that must be attached to every residential building contract over $20,000 under HBA 1989.
- glossary 23 May 2026Consumer warning (NSW owner-builder sale) NSW HBA s.95 mandatory warning in the contract of sale when an owner-builder sells within 7.5 years of permit. Missing warning voids the contract before settlement.
- glossary 1 June 2026Consumer warning (owner-builder) A consumer warning is the prescribed notice an owner-builder must put in the sale contract, telling the buyer the work was owner-built and lacks builder's warranty.
- glossary 14 May 2026Contaminated land (NSW) Contaminated land in NSW is governed by the Resilience and Hazards SEPP 2021 Chapter 4 (formerly SEPP 55). Site investigation, remediation, and DA effect for builders.
- glossary 1 June 2026Contaminated Land Register (CLR) Queensland's Contaminated Land Register (CLR) lists land needing remediation; a CLR listing attaches to title and blocks residential use until the site is cleaned.
- glossary 1 June 2026Continuous insulation Continuous insulation is a layer (usually rigid foam board) run over the outside of the framing so it covers the whole wall without the thermal bridges studs create.
- glossary 10 May 2026Contract administration (CA) Contract administration (CA) is the architect or superintendent's role during construction: RFIs, progress claims, variations, site inspections, and practical completion.
- glossary 16 May 2026Contract administrator (ABIC and similar) The contract administrator is the independent party (usually the architect on ABIC contracts) who certifies progress, assesses EOTs, and decides disputes.
- glossary 30 May 2026Contract particulars Contract particulars are the schedule of a building contract where parties enter the job-specific numbers (price, dates, deposit, LD rate, PC/PS) that make it binding.
- glossary 30 May 2026Contract reconciliation (PC and PS allowances) Contract reconciliation compares each PC and PS allowance to actual cost: the builder charges the excess plus margin on the excess only, or credits the owner any saving.
- glossary 16 May 2026Contract sum Contract sum is the total contracted price in a building contract. Check inclusions: GST, PC sums, PS items. First of the big-money clauses to read before signing.
- glossary 14 May 2026Contract works insurance Contract works (CW) insurance covers physical loss or damage to the works during construction: fire, theft, storm. Builder's primer on scope, holder, and exclusions.
- glossary 1 June 2026Contractor licence A contractor licence lets a person or company enter building contracts and advertise, unlike a supervisor certificate; needed above about $5,000 in most states.
- glossary 15 May 2026Contractual chain duty (WHS) A PCBU's WHS duty cannot be transferred to a sub by sub-letting. Each PCBU in the chain owes its own duty to its workers and others affected by its work.
- glossary 8 May 2026Control joint A control joint is a planned weakened plane in a concrete slab that guides where cracking occurs. Spacing under AS 3727.1: max 4 x slab thickness.
- glossaryControlled fill Controlled fill is compacted earthworks placed under geotechnical supervision per AS 3798:2007. Required under footings to avoid Class P classification.
- glossary 14 May 2026Cooling-off period Cooling-off lets a client rescind a residential building contract within 5 clear business days in NSW, VIC, QLD, SA. Builder guide to notice, clock, and costs.
- glossary 14 May 2026Coping (masonry) Coping is the protective top to a masonry wall, pier, or parapet, designed to shed water away from the wall face. Materials, fall, overhang, drip detail.
- glossary 30 May 2026Copper azole Copper azole (CuAz/MCA) is a copper-based, arsenic-free timber preservative that replaced CCA for residential use, rated for outdoor hazard classes under AS 1604.
- glossary 14 May 2026Core drilling Core drilling cuts round holes through concrete, masonry, or stone with a diamond bit. Wet method or on-tool extraction is mandatory for silica control.
- glossaryCornice cement Cornice cement: a fast-setting gypsum compound used to fix cove cornice to plasterboard at wall-ceiling junctions in Australian residential construction.
- glossary 4 June 2026Cost library A cost library is the maintained database of material, labour and subbie rates an estimator maps takeoff items to. A stale library is a top cause of under-priced jobs.
- glossary 25 May 2026Cost of goods sold (builder) COGS for a builder is the cost directly attributable to a job: materials, subbie labour, plant, site costs. Revenue minus COGS is gross margin. What's in vs out.
- glossary 9 June 2026Cost of works Cost of works is the estimated value of building work declared on an application; it sets permit and levy fees, licensing and insurance thresholds, and warranty triggers.
- glossary 30 May 2026Cost overrun A cost overrun is spend above the contract price. Under lump-sum the builder wears it (except variations and PC/PS); under cost-plus the client carries it.
- glossary 2 May 2026Cost-plus contract actual cost + builder's margin.
- glossary 11 June 2026Council Assessment Panel (CAP) A CAP is SA's independent planning panel that decides Performance Assessed DAs under the PDI Act 2016, replacing elected-member assessment for most residential work.
- glossary 16 May 2026Counter-flashing Counter-flashing is the secondary flashing that overlaps the upstand of a primary roof flashing to stop water tracking behind it at parapet, chimney and wall junctions.
- glossary 1 June 2026Coupled roof A coupled roof is a pitched roof where ceiling joists tie the rafter feet to resist outward thrust, as opposed to a roof carried on a structural ridge beam.
- glossary 30 May 2026Coursing Coursing is the vertical brick module: a 76 mm brick plus a 10 mm joint makes an 86 mm course, the unit sills, heads and wall heights are set out to land on.
- glossary 30 May 2026CPC40120 (Certificate IV in Building and Construction) CPC40120 is the Certificate IV in Building and Construction (Building), the standard entry-level builder qualification and a pathway to SA, TAS and NSW licences.
- glossary 30 May 2026CPC50220 (Diploma of Building and Construction) CPC50220 is the Diploma of Building and Construction (Building), the VET qualification above the Cert IV and the TAS Medium Rise builder licence qualification.
- glossary 8 May 2026CPD (Continuing Professional Development) CPD (Continuing Professional Development) is the annual training requirement for NSW individual building and swimming pool contractor licence holders.
- glossary 24 May 2026CPEng (Chartered Professional Engineer) CPEng is Engineers Australia's chartered credential for experienced engineers. How it relates to the NER register and Queensland's mandatory RPEQ registration.
- glossary 10 May 2026Crazing Crazing is a fine network of surface cracks in cement render or concrete, caused by rapid drying, over-trowelling or a cement-rich mix. Not structural.
- glossary 7 May 2026Critical path The critical path is the sequence of dependent construction activities that determines the minimum time to complete a project. Delays on it delay practical completion.
- glossary 26 May 2026Cross-laminated timber (CLT) CLT is a structural mass-timber panel of crosswise-glued board layers used for floors, walls and roofs. It sits outside AS 1684, designed by engineer and supplier.
- glossary 8 May 2026Crossover A driveway crossover is the section of a driveway crossing council-owned land (the verge) between your property boundary and the road. Permit required.
- glossary 29 May 2026CSIRO CSIRO is Australia's national science agency: behind many building product test methods, fire-resistance standards, termite-barrier research, and soil classification.
- glossary 25 May 2026CSR Gyprock Red Book The CSR Gyprock Red Book is the design guide of tested plasterboard systems with documented FRLs. How builders use it to spec a compliant fire-rated wall.
- glossary 16 May 2026Curing compound (concrete) Curing compound is the liquid film sprayed on fresh concrete to retain moisture for hydration. Spec'd to AS 3799. Cheaper than wet hessian; compatible-check needed.
- glossary 11 June 2026Currency period (development approval, QLD) QLD development approvals lapse unless acted on: MCU 6 years, reconfiguring a lot 4 years, operational works 2 years. How to extend under s86.
- glossary 1 June 2026Current ratio The current ratio (current assets / current liabilities) is a QBCC Minimum Financial Requirements test; a Queensland builder's licence needs at least 1:1.
- glossary 11 June 2026Curtain wall A curtain wall is a non-loadbearing glazed facade hung off slab edges on commercial buildings. Covers stick vs unitised, AS 1288, and NCC non-combustibility.
- glossary 16 May 2026Custom Orb corrugated roofing Custom Orb is Lysaght's 16 mm corrugated steel roofing profile: 762 mm cover, 5 degree minimum pitch. The heritage AU default for federation roofs.
- glossary 14 May 2026Cut and fill Cut and fill is the earthworks method that levels a building pad. Balance, controlled vs uncontrolled fill, batter slopes, and AS 3798 supervision explained.
- glossary 2 May 2026D&C builder takes on design risk.
- glossary 2 May 2026DA (Development Application) planning approval pathways.
- glossary 8 May 2026Damp-proof course Damp-proof course (DPC): a waterproof barrier built into masonry walls to stop moisture rising from the ground. Required under NCC Housing Provisions 5.7.3 and 5.7.4.
- glossary 9 May 2026DAP (Development Assessment Panel WA) What a DAP is in WA: an independent panel that can determine development applications over $2 million on an opt-in basis. Single houses are excluded.
- glossary 9 May 2026Daub-and-dab Daub-and-dab is a plasterboard fixing method that bonds sheets directly to masonry using adhesive dabs rather than furring channels or stud framing.
- glossary 8 May 2026DBI (Domestic Building Insurance) DBI (Domestic Building Insurance) is mandatory in Victoria for work over $16,000. Protects homeowners if a builder dies, becomes insolvent, or disappears.
- glossary 8 May 2026DBP (Design and Building Practitioners) DBP (Design and Building Practitioners) is the NSW registration scheme for professionals working on Class 2, 3 and 9c buildings under the DBP Act 2020.
- glossary 8 May 2026DBYD (Dial Before You Dig) DBYD (Dial Before You Dig) is a free referral service (phone 1100) to locate underground services before any excavation. Legal obligation on most Australian sites.
- glossary 8 May 2026DCP (Development Control Plan) What a DCP is in NSW planning: the council design guide that sits below the LEP, covering setbacks, landscaping, solar access, and car parking.
- glossary 8 May 2026DDA (Disability Discrimination Act) The DDA (Disability Discrimination Act 1992) is the federal law that makes it unlawful to discriminate on grounds of disability. Premises Standards flow from it.
- glossary 1 June 2026Dead load Dead load is the permanent self-weight of a building (roof, walls, floors, finishes, fixed services), a core AS/NZS 1170.1 action combined with live and wind loads.
- glossary 1 June 2026Debonded tile A debonded tile has separated from its adhesive bed (sounds drummy when tapped), caused by low adhesive coverage, movement, or a contaminated substrate; a top PCI defect.
- glossary 14 May 2026Debonding (tiling) Debonding is when adhesive separates from substrate or tile back. Tiles drum, lift, or fall. Causes: low coverage, substrate movement, moisture, wrong adhesive.
- glossary 1 June 2026Deck subframe A deck subframe is the frame of bearers and joists, anchored to footings, that carries a deck's boards and foot-traffic load beneath the visible decking timber.
- glossary 16 May 2026Deemed worker (workers comp) Deemed worker is a contractor classified as employee for workers comp despite holding ABN. State tests: NSW Sched 1; Vic 80% test; others common-law multifactor.
- glossary 15 May 2026Deemed-to-comply (AS 2870) AS 2870 deemed-to-comply is the tabulated footing design route for standard reactive sites. Distinct from NCC's DTS pathway. Common source of submission confusion.
- glossary 4 May 2026Deemed-to-Satisfy (DTS) Deemed-to-Satisfy is the NCC compliance pathway where following the prescribed numbers and methods automatically meets the Performance Requirements.
- glossary 3 June 2026Deep soil zone A deep soil zone is contiguous natural ground with no slab beneath, required as a percentage of site (e.g. 7% under the NSW ADG) for tree roots and stormwater.
- glossary 23 May 2026Defects inspection report (Vic owner-builder) Vic Building Act s.137B mandatory defects report by a registered building practitioner, max 6 months old, for owner-builder sale within 6.5 years of completion.
- glossary 2 May 2026Defects liability period period after practical completion when builder must fix defects (usually 12 months residential).
- glossary 2 May 2026Defects list The defects list is the running list of items identified at Practical Completion Inspection that the builder must rectify before final payment.
- glossary 16 May 2026Defence costs (insurance) Defence costs are legal and expert witness costs in an insurance claim. Critical PI question: are defence costs inside the limit (reduces payout) or outside it.
- glossary 30 May 2026Deferred commencement consent (NSW) A deferred commencement consent is a NSW development consent granted but not operative until the applicant satisfies the consent authority on a specified matter.
- glossary 11 June 2026Deformed bar Deformed bar is steel reo with rolled surface ribs for mechanical bond with concrete. D500N is the standard grade. Plain bar (R) for fitments only.
- glossary 14 May 2026Delay event A delay event is a contract-listed cause that lets the builder claim an extension of time. Compensable vs non-compensable, and common categories.
- glossary 14 May 2026Delivery docket A delivery docket is the supplier-issued record of grade, treatment, and quantity for each load. Builder's evidence of compliant material; keep for certifier sign-off.
- glossary 8 May 2026Demerit point A demerit point is a penalty recorded against a builder's licence after a disciplinary decision. The ACT uses a demerit scheme to manage repeat offending.
- glossary 24 May 2026Demolition licence class Demolishing a loadbearing structure needs a demolition licence, and the class depends on the work. NSW has DE1 (unrestricted) and DE2 (restricted).
- glossary 14 May 2026Deposit (residential building contract) Deposit is the initial payment at residential contract signing. State legislation caps the maximum: 10% NSW, 5%-10% VIC, 5%-20% QLD by tier. Builder primer.
- glossary 16 May 2026Deposit cap (residential building contract) Statutory maximum deposit on a residential building contract: 10% in NSW; 5% on Vic contracts $20k+, 10% under. Over-cap demand is a regulator-prosecuted offence.
- glossary 8 May 2026Deposited Plan (DP) What a Deposited Plan (DP) is in NSW: the survey plan that legally defines lot boundaries. Needed for planning certificate applications and title searches.
- glossary 16 May 2026Desiccant (IGU spacer) Desiccant is silica gel inside the IGU spacer bar absorbing cavity moisture. When the perimeter seal fails, fogging appears between the panes.
- glossary 16 May 2026Design life (residential structures) Design life is the period a structure must perform its intended function. Residential houses 50 years, retaining walls 60 years, termite systems 50 years.
- glossary 8 May 2026Design practitioner (NSW DBP Act) A design practitioner is registered under the NSW Design and Building Practitioners Act 2020 to prepare regulated designs for Class 2 and other buildings.
- glossary 14 May 2026Design rainfall intensity Design rainfall intensity (mm/hr at 5-minute duration) sizes gutters and downpipes under AS/NZS 3500.3:2025. From BOM IFD data; site-specific; 1:20 ARI for eaves.
- glossary 15 May 2026Design risk transfer (D&C contracts) Under D&C the builder takes design liability that under construct-only sits with the architect or engineer. Why the lump sum costs more and PI insurance turns on.
- glossary 15 May 2026Design suction change (Hs / Hsm) Design suction change (Hs) is the AS 2870 reactive-soil input quantifying expected soil moisture change. Drives site classification (M, H1, H2, E) and slab design.
- glossary 11 June 2026Design verification statement (SEPP 65) A design verification statement is the architect's SEPP 65 sign-off that an apartment DA meets the Apartment Design Guide's 9 principles and 25 criteria.
- glossary 23 May 2026Designated development (NSW) Designated development is the NSW high-impact DA category under EP&A Act s4.18: 28-day public notice + newspaper + third-party appeal rights to LEC.
- glossary 2 May 2026Detention stormwater management often required by council for new impervious area.
- glossary 16 May 2026Determination (SOPA adjudication) Determination is the SOPA adjudicator's written decision on the disputed amount. Enforceable as judgment debt; interim only, doesn't end the underlying dispute.
- glossary 1 June 2026Development standard A development standard is a measurable planning control (FSR, height, lot size, setbacks) in an LEP or scheme that a development must meet or formally seek to vary.
- glossary 14 May 2026Diagonal cracking (brickwork) Diagonal cracks running across brickwork courses radiate from window and door corners. Caused by missing articulation, mortar-bridged joints, or footing movement.
- glossary 16 May 2026Differential movement (footings) Differential movement is the structural defect where one part of a footing rises or settles relative to another. The primary failure AS 2870 footing designs resist.
- glossary 1 June 2026Digital takeoff A takeoff measures quantities of work (linear, area, count, volume) off the plans so each item can be priced into a quote, the foundation of an accurate estimate.
- glossary 16 May 2026Dimensional stability (building materials) Dimensional stability is a material's ability to hold length, width and shape across moisture and temperature changes. Drives LVL vs solid-timber selection.
- glossary 24 May 2026Direct cost vs overhead Direct costs are tied to a job (materials, subbies, site labour). Overhead is the cost of running the business. Mixing them up is how a quote quietly loses money.
- glossary 30 May 2026Direct-fix cladding Direct-fix cladding is fixed straight to the frame with no cavity, so foil sarking behind it is a vapour barrier only, a condensation risk in cool climates (zones 6-8).
- glossary 10 May 2026Direct-stick (glue-down carpet installation) Direct-stick carpet bonds directly to the subfloor with adhesive, no underlay. Used on stairs, over radiant heating, and in commercial-grade residential areas.
- glossary 7 May 2026Discontinuous Construction Discontinuous construction is a wall with two independent stud rows or masonry leaves, required by NCC 2022 for separating walls between dwellings.
- glossaryDMIRS (Building and Energy, WA) DMIRS Building and Energy is WA's building regulator, issuing and renewing contractor registrations under the Building Services (Registration) Act 2011 (WA).
- glossary 2 May 2026Document precedence order of authority when documents conflict (typically contract > spec > drawings > schedules).
- glossary 3 June 2026Dogger A dogger holds a dogging high-risk work licence to select and inspect rigging, sling the load, and direct the crane operator when the load is out of the operator's view.
- glossary 14 May 2026Domestic building contract A domestic building contract is the statutory term for a residential contract above each state's threshold. Triggers cooling-off, deposit caps, warranty.
- glossary 9 May 2026Dominant tenement The dominant tenement is the property that benefits from an easement. The owner of the dominant tenement holds the right to use the burdened (servient) land.
- glossary 16 May 2026Door closer (hardware) A door closer is the spring hinge, overhead hydraulic, or floor-mounted device that auto-closes a door. Required on the garage-to-dwelling door under NCC Part 9.2.3.
- glossary 1 June 2026Door jamb A door jamb is the vertical side of a door frame that the leaf closes against, fixed plumb and flashed before cladding; out-of-plumb jambs are a common fit defect.
- glossary 10 May 2026Door reveal A door reveal is the lining that finishes the sides and head of a door opening, forming the visible face of the frame between the wall and the door stop.
- glossary 29 May 2026Drainage outlet (roof) A roof drainage outlet is the primary sump or drain that takes water off a flat or membrane roof into the downpipe network under AS/NZS 3500.3.
- glossary 16 May 2026Drained cavity (external wall) Drained cavity: ventilated gap between cladding and wall wrap that drains incidental water and vents vapour. NCC 2025 makes it mandatory in climate zones 6, 7, 8.
- glossary 14 May 2026Drainer A drainer is the plumbing sub-trade licensed for sanitary and stormwater drainage below ground. Mains connections, pits, soak wells, sub-slab DWV are drainer work.
- glossary 30 May 2026Drawdown (construction loan) A drawdown is the lender releasing a tranche of a construction loan as each build stage completes, after a progress inspection; the lag is a common cashflow squeeze.
- glossary 2 May 2026Drawing register list of all drawings issued, with revisions.
- glossary 16 May 2026Dry film thickness (DFT) Dry film thickness is the coating thickness after solvent flashes off, measured in microns. AS 4654 sets minimums; DFT verification is the install-acceptance gate.
- glossary 1 June 2026Dry-fix (roofing) Dry-fix roofing clips ridge and hip tiles with a ventilated ridge roll instead of cement pointing, removing the pointing-failure defect behind most ridge leaks.
- glossary 14 May 2026Dual occupancy Dual occupancy is two dwellings on one lot. Since 1 July 2024 the Housing SEPP permits them in R1-R4 zones state-wide: 450 m² lot, 12 m width, 9.5 m, FSR 0.65:1.
- glossary 1 June 2026Due date for payment (Security of Payment) The due date for payment is when a progress payment falls due under the contract or the Security of Payment Act default, starting the clock on adjudication rights.
- glossary 16 May 2026Due diligence (WHS officer duty) Due diligence under WHS Act s.27 is the standard officers must meet to ensure their PCBU complies. Six steps from knowledge to verification. The officer prosecution test.
- glossary 8 May 2026Durability class Durability class (DC1-DC4): AS 5604 rating for timber's natural resistance to decay and insect attack. DC1 is very durable (e.g. merbau); DC4 is slightly durable.
- glossary 15 May 2026Durable notice (termite) A durable notice is a permanent label, attached at handover, recording the termite barrier system, installer, and date. Required under AS 3660 for new builds.
- glossary 30 May 2026Duty class (wall ties) A duty class (light, medium, heavy) grades the load a wall tie can transfer under AS 2699.1, matched to wind classification through the NCC Housing Provisions.
- glossary 4 June 2026Duty holder (WHS) A duty holder is anyone the WHS Act places a health-and-safety duty on: the PCBU, officers, workers, and others like designers and suppliers, with overlapping duties.
- glossary 30 May 2026Duty of care (in Australian building) Duty of care in building is the obligation to take reasonable care not to cause harm. It spans four regimes: NSW DBP Act, WHS law, QLD cultural heritage, negligence.
- glossary 5 May 2026DWV (drain, waste, vent) What DWV pipework is, the three jobs it does, and where the standard for it lives.
- glossary 29 May 2026Easement An easement is a registered title right giving another party use of a defined strip for stormwater, sewer, power, or access. Building over needs authority consent.
- glossary 28 May 2026Eaves gutter An eaves gutter is the gutter at the edge of an eaves overhang. How it's sized to the catchment and AEP rainfall, and how it differs from valley and box gutters.
- glossary 15 May 2026Eaves height (AS 4055) AS 4055 applies to housing with eaves height up to 6.0 m above averaged ground level. Above that, design drops out of AS 4055 and into AS/NZS 1170.2.
- glossary 30 May 2026Edge distance Edge distance is how far an anchor sits from the concrete edge, a key input to AS 5216 capacity. Too close and the concrete breakout cone fails early.
- glossary 10 May 2026Edge protection Edge protection: temporary guardrail systems used at roof and floor edges to prevent falls. AS/NZS 4994.1:2023. Required when fall risk exceeds 2 m.
- glossary 8 May 2026Edge restraint An edge restraint is a physical barrier at the perimeter of segmental paving that prevents pavers migrating outward and bedding sand washing away.
- glossary 14 May 2026Edge thickening Edge thickening is the deepened perimeter of a residential slab, forming the edge beam. AS 2870 sets depth and reinforcement by site classification (A to H2).
- glossary 26 May 2026Effective slope (AS 3959 BAL input) Effective slope is the slope under the classified vegetation, one of the three AS 3959 BAL inputs. Downslope raises the BAL; upslope and flat are treated the same.
- glossary 10 May 2026Efflorescence Efflorescence: white salt deposits on masonry surfaces caused by water carrying soluble salts to the surface. A common indicator of moisture ingress or DPC failure.
- glossary 30 May 2026Elastomeric Elastomeric describes a material that cures to a permanently flexible, rubber-like state and recovers with cyclic movement, the property behind PU and silicone sealants.
- glossary 5 May 2026Electrical Certificate of Compliance (CoC) An electrical Certificate of Compliance certifies the installation meets AS/NZS 3000. Each Australian state issues its own form (CCEW, CES, Certificate of Test).
- glossary 30 May 2026Embedment depth Embedment depth is how deep an anchor is set into concrete; the AS 5216 capacity is calculated against it. Short embedment is the main cause of pull-out failure.
- glossary 14 May 2026Ember attack Ember attack is wind-blown burning embers landing on or entering a building ahead of the fire front. Dominant ignition mechanism in Australian bushfire losses.
- glossary 10 May 2026Emittance Emittance measures how readily a surface radiates heat. In insulation, a surface emittance of 0.05 or less qualifies as reflective under NCC 2022 and AS/NZS 4859.1.
- glossary 28 May 2026Encroachment (setback) A setback encroachment is a building element allowed to project into a required setback zone. State limits, what counts, and how it differs from a boundary encroachment.
- glossary 1 June 2026Encumbrance An encumbrance is any registered burden on a property title (easement, covenant, mortgage, caveat, lease) that can constrain a build; a title search lists them all.
- glossary 14 May 2026End lap (metal roofing) End lap is the overlap where two metal roof sheets meet end-to-end. AS 1562.1 minimums by pitch: 150 mm above 10 degrees, 300 mm at lower pitches.
- glossary 10 May 2026End-coat End-coat is a primer applied to cut edges of fibre cement cladding before installation. Omitting it is the most common single defect on FC cladding sites.
- glossary 4 June 2026Energisation Energisation is connecting a new or altered electrical installation to live supply after testing and certification, often a critical-path item near completion.
- glossary 1 June 2026Energy assessor (NatHERS) A NatHERS energy assessor models a home's thermal performance in approved software before construction, producing the report that sets its glazing and insulation.
- glossary 2 May 2026Energy report assesses thermal performance, drives glazing/insulation specs.
- glossary 2 May 2026Engineer's details drawings produced by a structural engineer specifying footings, framing, steel, etc.
- glossary 3 June 2026Engineered stone Engineered stone is a quartz-composite slab, historically up to ~90% crystalline silica. Its fabrication and installation is prohibited in Australia from 1 July 2024.
- glossary 1 June 2026Engineering controls (WHS) Engineering controls cut a hazard by physical means built into the work (guarding, ventilation, on-tool dust extraction), ranking above admin controls and PPE.
- glossary 24 May 2026Engineers Australia Engineers Australia is the peak professional body for engineers. It runs the Chartered (CPEng) credential and the NER register that feed state registration like RPEQ.
- glossary 16 May 2026Entry permit (confined space) An entry permit is the written authorisation to enter a specific confined space. Records risk assessment, atmospheric test, isolation, PPE, rescue arrangements.
- glossary 1 June 2026Environmental Audit Overlay (EAO) An Environmental Audit Overlay (EAO) blocks sensitive use of Victorian land until an environmental audit certificate or statement issues under the EP Act 2017.
- glossary 23 May 2026Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) EIS is the full impact study for designated development and major projects: environmental, social, economic. Mandatory for NSW designated dev; bigger than a SoEE.
- glossary 7 May 2026EOT (Extension of Time) An EOT is a formal written claim that extends the contracted building period when a qualifying delay beyond the builder's control occurs. Prevents liquidated damages.
- glossary 14 May 2026EP&A Act (NSW) The EP&A Act 1979 (NSW) is the umbrella planning statute behind every DA, CC, OC, LEP, DCP, and SEPP in NSW. Builder primer on the parts that matter on site.
- glossaryEPS (expanded polystyrene) Expanded polystyrene (EPS): lightweight foam used in cornice, insulation panels, and formwork in Australian residential construction.
- glossary 30 May 2026European Technical Assessment (ETA) A European Technical Assessment (ETA) is the AS 5216 Appendix B route that prequalifies most structural anchors (Hilti, Ramset, Hobson) here. ETAs are edition-specific.
- glossary 8 May 2026EV charging (residential) EV charging in new homes: what NCC 2025 requires builders to install at the rough-in stage, and why skipping it costs more later.
- glossary 10 May 2026EWP (Elevating Work Platform) EWP: a mobile elevated work platform (scissor lift, boom lift, cherry picker) used at height. HRCW trigger, operator licensing, and safe use explained.
- glossary 11 June 2026Exceptional Development Permit (NT) An NT Exceptional Development Permit lets the Minister approve development the NT Planning Scheme prohibits. Rare, discretionary, not a standard DA pathway.
- glossary 16 May 2026Excluded amounts (Vic SOP Act, historical) Excluded amounts were Victoria's unique SOP Act carve-out: claimants could not include variations, damages or delay costs. Repealed 15 April 2026 (ss 10A and 10B).
- glossary 30 May 2026Exclusion zone An exclusion zone is a demarcated no-go area on site around operating plant, a fall edge, or a live hazard, an isolation control briefed at induction.
- glossary 14 May 2026Exempt development (NSW) Exempt development is minor work listed in the Codes SEPP 2008 that needs no DA, CDC, or council approval. Size and setback caps apply. Heritage and bushfire remove it.
- glossary 16 May 2026Expansion joint Expansion joint is a sized gap in a slab, roof sheet, masonry wall or tile field that absorbs thermal expansion. A subset of movement joints, focused on thermal cycling.
- glossary 8 May 2026Exposed aggregate Exposed aggregate is a concrete finish where surface cement paste is removed to reveal the embedded stone. Popular for driveways; slip-resistant and durable.
- glossary 29 May 2026Exposure class (concrete) Exposure class is the AS 3600 environmental grade (A1 to C2) driving minimum concrete strength, cover to reo, and mix design. Coastal sites carry the strictest.
- glossary 14 May 2026Exposure grade (brick) Exposure grade (Exp) is the highest brick durability under AS/NZS 4455.1. Required within ~1 km of coast, below DPC, in saline soils. Salt-attack tested.
- glossary 14 May 2026Extension of time An extension of time (EOT) is a written claim for extra days under the contract when a qualifying delay event hits. Notice timing, qualifying events, and the LD shield.
- glossary 28 May 2026External waterproofing External waterproofing covers above-ground exterior surfaces (flat roofs, balconies, planters) under AS 4654 and NCC H2. How it differs from wet areas and tanking.
- glossary 14 May 2026F-grade timber F-grade is the timber stress grading system for hardwood and visually-graded softwood under AS 1720. F8, F11, F17, F27 feed AS 1684 span tables.
- glossary 1 June 2026Face-fixing Face-fixing means fastening cladding or decking through the visible front face, not a hidden-fix clip system; the fastener grade must suit timber and exposure.
- glossary 8 May 2026Fall Fall is the slope built into a wet area floor or surface to drain water toward the outlet. NCC 2022 requires 1:80 minimum to 1:50 maximum in shower floors.
- glossary 10 May 2026Fall arrest Fall arrest: a personal safety system (harness, lanyard, anchor) that stops a fall in progress. AS/NZS 1891.1:2020. Used when passive edge protection is not practicable.
- glossary 14 May 2026Fascia The fascia is the vertical board fixed to rafter tails along the eaves. Carries the gutter. Timber, metal Colorbond, or fibre cement. Plumb and straight is the test.
- glossary 25 May 2026Fibro Fibro is the Aussie term for fibre-cement sheet. Fibro made up to the late 1980s usually contains asbestos: treat pre-1990 fibro as asbestos unless tested.
- glossary 8 May 2026Fidelity Fund Certificate The NT Fidelity Fund Certificate is the residential building consumer protection scheme covering incomplete or defective work on NT prescribed residential works.
- glossary 30 May 2026Field sound test (in-situ acoustic test) A field sound test measures a built wall or floor's real sound insulation in situ (DnT,w+Ctr, LnT,w) for NCC F7V1; results run 5 to 8 dB below the lab rating.
- glossary 3 June 2026Final account The final account is the closing statement reconciling the contract sum with all variations, PC/PS adjustments and claims to arrive at the final amount payable.
- glossary 16 May 2026Final certificate (contract) Final certificate is issued at the end of the defects liability period confirming all defects rectified. Triggers second retention release and final payment.
- glossary 15 May 2026Final subcircuit A final subcircuit is the last leg of wiring between switchboard and consuming load. AS/NZS 3000 RCD and isolation rules are written in terms of this category.
- glossary 14 May 2026Finished floor level (FFL) FFL is the design height of the finished floor surface, set as an RL on the drawings. Every other building dimension references it. Common defects explained.
- glossary 16 May 2026Fire door Fire door is a door assembly tested under AS 1905.1 and certified to an FRL (e.g. -/60/30) for fire-rated walls. ID by compliance tag. Distinct from 35 mm solid-core.
- glossary 15 May 2026Fire safety schedule A fire safety schedule lists every fire safety measure required for a building (sprinklers, alarms, hose reels). Drives the annual Fire Safety Statement obligation.
- glossary 11 June 2026Fire sprinkler system NCC 2022 requires sprinklers above 25m and in Class 2-3 buildings 4+ storeys. AS 2118.1/4 or FPAA101D/H options. AS 1851 sets ongoing testing.
- glossary 7 May 2026Fire stop A fire stop seals penetrations through fire-rated walls and floors to block fire and smoke. Required wherever pipes, cables, or ducts cross a rated element.
- glossary 29 May 2026Fire watch (hot work) Fire watch is the supervised post-hot-work observation period (typically 60 min) after torch-on membrane, grinding, cutting, or welding near combustibles.
- glossary 25 May 2026Fire window A fire window is a non-openable FRL-rated glazed unit (commonly -/60/-) that lets you put a window in a fire-rated wall. The window equivalent of a fire door.
- glossary 14 May 2026First-fix plumbing First-fix plumbing is the rough-in stage: sewer, stormwater, sanitary stack, water runs to fixtures before slab pour. Notifiable work under AS/NZS 3500.
- glossary 1 June 2026First-resort scheme (home warranty) A first-resort home warranty scheme lets owners claim for defective or incomplete work without first proving builder insolvency, unlike the last-resort model.
- glossary 14 May 2026Fit-off Fit-off is trade shorthand for second-fix work: hanging fittings, plates, tapware, lights, doors. Each wet trade has its own fit-off visit. Used as 'second fix'.
- glossary 16 May 2026Fitness and propriety (builder licensing) Fitness and propriety is the test state licensing bodies (QBCC, NSW Fair Trading, VBA) apply to determine builder licence eligibility. Convictions, insolvency, breaches.
- glossary 10 June 2026Fixed-price contract A fixed-price (lump-sum) contract sets one price at signing, with the builder carrying overrun risk except for variations, PC/PS items and rise-and-fall.
- glossary 2 June 2026Fixing stage Fixing stage is the construction and progress-claim stage after lock-up, when internal linings, architraves, skirtings, doors and cabinets are fixed, before completion.
- glossary 11 May 2026FJ pine (finger-jointed pine) FJ pine (finger-jointed pine): short pine lengths joined with finger joints, the trade standard for skirting, architrave, and mouldings in Australian construction.
- glossary 7 May 2026Flanking Flanking is indirect sound transmission that bypasses a separating wall via junctions, ceilings, floors or service penetrations, causing NCC compliance failures in-situ.
- glossary 8 May 2026Flashing Flashing is a waterproofing strip or sheet at wall and roof junctions to prevent water ingress. Incorrectly lapped flashing is a top cause of water damage claims.
- glossary 16 May 2026Flexible pointing (roof tiles) Flexible pointing is silicone-based ridge and verge compound replacing cement mortar pointing on tile roofs. 20+ year life, accommodates movement, AS 2050.
- glossary 16 May 2026Float coat (cement render) Float coat is the second of three coats in a cement render system: 6-10 mm thick, floated to a true plane, keys for the finish coat. Also called the brown coat.
- glossary 9 May 2026Flood control lot A flood control lot is NSW land where flood-related development controls apply, disclosed on a Section 10.7 certificate. CDC and DA rules differ on these lots.
- glossary 16 May 2026Flood Management Report (NSW DA) Flood Management Report is a hydraulic engineer's DA-lodgement report for Medium/High Flood Risk Precincts in NSW. Floor levels, evacuation, overland flow.
- glossary 16 May 2026Flood Risk Precinct (NSW) NSW flood risk precinct classification (Low / Medium / High) maps each property against the FPA and PMF, driving DCP controls and CDC exclusion.
- glossary 16 May 2026Flood study (council) A council flood study maps flood behaviour, sets the Flood Planning Level, defines flood risk precincts, and underpins DCP flood rules for residential approvals.
- glossary 10 May 2026Flood test A flood test checks waterproofing membrane integrity in a wet area before tiling by filling the area with water and holding it for a set period.
- glossary 16 May 2026Floodway Floodway is the portion of a floodplain where flood water flows fast and deep, actively conveying flow. NSW classifies it as the highest-hazard zone.
- glossary 10 May 2026Floor waste A floor waste (floor drain) is the drain point in wet area floors. Position and height are plumber scope; tilers work to the set floor waste to achieve the required fall.
- glossary 29 May 2026Fly screen A fly screen is an insect mesh in a frame over a window or door. Fibreglass, aluminium, or stainless mesh. Does NOT count as a fall-from-height window restrictor.
- glossary 2 May 2026Footing the base of the structure transferring load to the ground.
- glossary 24 May 2026Form 12 (Aspect Inspection Certificate, Qld) Form 12 is the Queensland Aspect Inspection Certificate an appointed competent person (often an RPEQ) gives the certifier to confirm an aspect of work complies.
- glossary 24 May 2026Form 15 (RPEQ compliance certificate, Qld) Form 15 is the Queensland Compliance Certificate for Building Design or Specification, signed and stamped by an RPEQ certifying an engineered design complies.
- glossary 10 May 2026Formwork Formwork is the temporary mould that defines the shape and dimensions of a concrete element before and during the pour. Must be accurate, braced, and stable.
- glossary 30 May 2026Founding depth Founding depth is the depth a footing must reach to bear on soil of adequate capacity, set by the geotechnical investigation and used in the AS 2870 footing design.
- glossary 9 May 2026FPL (flood planning level) The FPL is the flood level used to set minimum floor heights in NSW: the 1% AEP flood plus 0.5 m freeboard. Habitable rooms must sit at or above it.
- glossary 15 May 2026Frame stage Frame stage is the build phase after the timber frame is complete but before sheeting. Critical inspection point and a major progress-payment milestone.
- glossary 14 May 2026Frame stage (payment milestone) Frame stage as a payment milestone is when the frame is complete and inspection signed off. Distinct from frame stage as build sequence. Builder primer.
- glossary 15 May 2026Framing inspection The framing inspection is the certifier's visit between completed frame and sheeting. Confirms spans, bracing, tie-downs, lintels match the engineering before lining.
- glossary 16 May 2026Freeboard (flood planning) Freeboard is a vertical safety margin (typically 500 mm in NSW residential) added above the 1% AEP flood level to set the habitable floor minimum (FPL).
- glossary 11 June 2026Friction stay A friction stay is the hinge arm that holds casement and awning windows open. Sizing, stainless 304 vs 316 for coastal use, and restrictor interactions.
- glossary 7 May 2026FRL FRL (Fire Resistance Level) is the code measure of how long an element resists fire. Three numbers: structural adequacy/integrity/insulation in minutes.
- glossary 8 May 2026FSR (Floor Space Ratio) What FSR means on a NSW LEP: the ratio of a building's gross floor area to the site area. How it limits how much you can build on a lot.
- glossary 1 June 2026Fully adhered (membrane roof) Fully adhered is a flat-roof membrane method where the sheet is bonded over its whole underside to the substrate, giving the best wind-uplift resistance and no flutter.
- glossary 8 May 2026FWO (Fair Work Ombudsman) The Fair Work Ombudsman enforces the Fair Work Act 2009 across all industries including building and construction. It took over from the ABCC in 2022-23.
- glossary 11 June 2026GAIC (Growth Areas Infrastructure Contribution) GAIC is a one-off VIC levy on land in Melbourne's growth corridors. Rates, trigger events, staged payment elections and s32 disclosure explained.
- glossary 8 May 2026Galvanic corrosion Galvanic corrosion occurs when dissimilar metals contact in the presence of moisture, accelerating decay. Prohibited metal pairings are listed in NCC 2022 HP 7.2.
- glossary 11 June 2026Galvanising Galvanising applies zinc to steel for corrosion protection. Covers hot-dip vs electro-galvanised, HDG600 vs Z275 grades, and coastal exposure rules.
- glossary 25 May 2026General interest charge (GIC) GIC is the ATO's daily-compounding interest on unpaid tax debts (BAS, PAYG). From 1 July 2025 it is no longer tax-deductible, making an ATO debt a costly overdraft.
- glossary 8 May 2026GFA (Gross Floor Area) What GFA means in NSW planning: how gross floor area is measured under the Housing Code, what counts, and how it caps dwelling size under CDC.
- glossary 5 May 2026Ghost joint A ghost joint is the outline of a plasterboard joint showing through the finished paint. Caused by painting before compound has fully cured or by insufficient sanding.
- glossary 3 June 2026Girt A girt is a horizontal member fixed to columns to support wall sheeting, the wall-plane equivalent of a roof purlin, common on sheds and steel-framed structures.
- glossary 8 May 2026GITA (Geotechnical Inspection and Testing Authority) GITA (Geotechnical Inspection and Testing Authority) is the on-site supervisor required under AS 3798:2007 to certify controlled fill placement.
- glossary 7 May 2026Going The going is the horizontal depth of a stair tread measured nosing to nosing. NCC 2022 sets a going of 240 mm to 355 mm for standard residential stairs.
- glossary 2 May 2026GPO electrical socket.
- glossary 16 May 2026Grab rail Grab rail is a wall-fixed support rail beside toilets, showers, and baths. NCC H8 requires reinforced bathroom walls so grab rails can be retrofitted without rebuild.
- glossary 29 May 2026Grade 304 stainless steel Grade 304 stainless is 18% chromium 8% nickel: general external residential fixings, handrails, sinks. Will rust in salt air; coastal pool surrounds need 316.
- glossary 29 May 2026Grade 316 stainless steel Grade 316 stainless adds 2-3% molybdenum to the 304 chemistry for chloride resistance. Required for coastal fixings, pool surrounds, saline-soil applications.
- glossary 29 May 2026Grade 316L stainless steel 316L is austenitic stainless with carbon below 0.03%, for weldability and severe coastal corrosion. Required for wall ties within 1 km of breaking surf.
- glossary 14 May 2026Grade stamp (timber) A grade stamp is the inked or branded mark on each piece of structural timber. Stress grade, treatment, species, seasoning. Required evidence under AS 1684.
- glossary 14 May 2026Gross margin (builder) Gross margin is (contract price minus direct costs) divided by contract price. Headline job profitability. Industry benchmark for Australian residential is 20-22%.
- glossary 16 May 2026Ground beam (pier-and-beam footing) Ground beam is a reinforced concrete beam spanning between pier footings, tying them and supporting the structure above. Engineer-designed; not a DTS element.
- glossary 1 June 2026Ground clearance (cladding) Ground clearance is the minimum gap the NCC and manufacturers require between the bottom of cladding or slab edge and finished ground, to keep moisture and termites out.
- glossary 14 May 2026Ground movement (characteristic surface movement, ys) Ground movement (ys) is expected vertical soil movement from moisture change. AS 2870 site classes: S ≤20 mm, M 20-40 mm, H1 40-60 mm, H2 60-75 mm, E > 75 mm.
- glossary 11 June 2026Grouped dwelling (WA R-Codes) A grouped dwelling is two or more dwellings on one WA lot, none above another. Assessed under R-Codes Volume 1, not Volume 2 apartments.
- glossary 10 May 2026Grout Grout fills joints between tiles after fixing. Rigid grout for field joints; flexible sealant at movement joints and internal corners per AS 3958:2023.
- glossary 10 May 2026GST (Goods and Services Tax) GST is the 10% consumption tax collected on most goods and services in Australia. Builders must register once annual turnover hits $75,000.
- glossary 10 May 2026GTO (Group Training Organisation) A Group Training Organisation is the legal employer of an apprentice. Builders become host employers, getting trade labour without the full employment admin burden.
- glossary 14 May 2026Gypsum core (plasterboard) The gypsum core is the compressed calcium sulfate dihydrate panel between two paper faces in plasterboard. Fire-rated and impact-resistant cores explained.
- glossary 10 May 2026H2 treated timber H2 treated timber: preservative-treated framing for enclosed above-ground use in termite-prone areas. Protects against termites but not decay. AS 3660.1 Appendix D.
- glossary 8 May 2026H3 treated timber H3 treated timber: preservative-treated timber for above-ground exterior use (decking, cladding, fence rails). H4 required for ground contact. Australian standard.
- glossary 25 May 2026Habitable room A habitable room is an NCC term for a room used for daily living. It triggers the 2.4m ceiling, natural-light, and ventilation requirements. What counts and what doesn't.
- glossary 26 May 2026Hammerhead (access turning area) A hammerhead is a T-shaped turning area at the end of a long or shared access so fire appliances and trucks can turn and exit forwards, not reverse out.
- glossary 14 May 2026HardieFlex HardieFlex is James Hardie's smooth-faced fibre cement sheet. 4.5 mm and 6 mm. Type A external rating per AS/NZS 2908.2. Eaves, cladding, soffits.
- glossary 1 June 2026Hazard class (backflow) The backflow hazard class (low, medium, high) under AS/NZS 3500.1 rates a connection's contamination risk and sets the backflow device, from a check valve to an RPZ.
- glossary 14 May 2026Hazardous manual task A hazardous manual task is one with repetitive force, sustained force, awkward posture, or vibration. WHS Reg 60 triggers PCBU duties. Builder primer on controls.
- glossary 2 May 2026Hazmat survey pre-demo identification of hazardous materials.
- glossary 7 May 2026HBCF (Home Building Compensation Fund) HBCF (Home Building Compensation Fund) is NSW's mandatory last-resort home warranty insurance scheme, administered by icare for residential building work over $20,000.
- glossary 30 May 2026Head contract A head contract is the principal contract between the owner and the head contractor (builder) for the whole works; its obligations flow down to subcontracts.
- glossary 8 May 2026Head contractor A head contractor is the main builder responsible for delivering a project, contracting directly with the client and engaging subcontractors to complete the work.
- glossary 16 May 2026Head flashing (window or door) Head flashing is the formed metal or tape flashing above a window or door that sheds water out and over the cladding, not behind it. Most-missed install-defect cause.
- glossary 16 May 2026Head lap (roof tiles) Head lap is the amount each row of roof tiles overlaps the row below at the upper end. Pitch-dependent; lower pitches need larger head laps.
- glossary 1 June 2026Heads of consideration (s4.15) Heads of consideration are the matters a NSW consent authority must weigh on a DA under s4.15 EP&A Act: planning instruments, DCP, impacts, suitability, submissions.
- glossary 1 June 2026Health monitoring (WHS) WHS health monitoring is PCBU-arranged medical checks (spirometry for silica, blood tests for lead) for workers with significant exposure to hazardous substances.
- glossary 16 May 2026Heartwood Heartwood is the dense, decay-resistant inner wood of a tree. AS 5604 durability ratings apply only to heartwood. Sapwood is always Class 4 regardless of species.
- glossary 1 June 2026Heat-welded seam A heat-welded seam joins thermoplastic membrane (TPO, PVC) laps with hot air so they fuse into one homogeneous joint, more durable than adhesive-bonded seams over time.
- glossary 16 May 2026Hebel (AAC product) Hebel is the CSR brand of autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) panels and blocks, dominant in AU residential and Class 2. Lightweight, fire-rated, insulating.
- glossary 10 May 2026Height certificate A height certificate is a surveyor's certification that finished floor level and building height match the approved plans and council conditions. Required pre-OC.
- glossary 8 May 2026Height of Buildings (HOB) What HOB means on a NSW LEP: the maximum building height in metres set on the LEP Height of Buildings Map. How it is measured and applied.
- glossary 29 May 2026HEPA filter (and Class H vacuum) HEPA removes 99.97% of 0.3 micron particles. AS/NZS 60335.2.69 Class H vacuums add sealed housing and airflow for silica, asbestos and regulated dusts.
- glossary 16 May 2026Heritage Conservation Area (HCA) Heritage Conservation Area is a precinct listed in the LEP for streetscape and character value. Sites in HCA require DA with HIS; CDC unavailable.
- glossary 16 May 2026Heritage consultant Heritage consultant is a qualified practitioner who prepares Heritage Impact Statements, Conservation Management Plans, and heritage advice for DAs.
- glossary 14 May 2026Heritage Impact Statement (HIS) A Heritage Impact Statement (HIS) is the heritage consultant's report on proposed works to a listed item or in a conservation area. Required at DA lodgement, not after.
- glossary 16 May 2026Heritage item Heritage item is a building or place listed on a state register or LEP heritage schedule. Triggers a DA with heritage impact statement. CDC unavailable.
- glossary 29 May 2026Heritage overlay A heritage overlay is a planning layer on a lot recognising heritage significance. Triggers extra assessment and restricts demolition, materials, form, and colour.
- glossary 1 June 2026Heritage permit A heritage permit is the state heritage authority approval (Heritage Victoria, NSW s.60) to work on a state-listed place, separate from the council planning permit.
- glossary 1 June 2026Heritage significance Heritage significance is the historical, aesthetic, social or scientific value that gets a place listed, the thing heritage controls exist to protect.
- glossary 16 May 2026Heritage Victoria Heritage Victoria administers the Heritage Act 2017 and the Victorian Heritage Register. Issues heritage permits for works on state-listed places.
- glossary 14 May 2026HIA (Housing Industry Association) HIA is the Housing Industry Association, the residential-builder industry body. Publishes the HIA contract suite, HIA Guide, runs apprenticeship and training.
- glossary 2 May 2026HIA contracts Housing Industry Association contracts.
- glossary 2 May 2026HIA Guide to Materials and Workmanship The HIA's national reference for acceptable materials and workmanship in Australian residential building. Used at PCI to settle defect disputes.
- glossary 2 May 2026HIA Guide to Standards and Tolerances (correction, see HIA Guide to Materials and Workmanship) The HIA's national workmanship guide is correctly called the HIA Guide to Materials and Workmanship. State-issued guides are called Guide to Standards and Tolerances.
- glossary 25 May 2026Hierarchy of controls The hierarchy of controls ranks risk controls most-to-least effective: elimination, substitution, isolation, engineering, administrative, then PPE last.
- glossary 8 May 2026HII (Home Indemnity Insurance) Home Indemnity Insurance (HII) is WA's mandatory protection for residential building work over $20,000. Covers the owner if the builder dies or disappears.
- glossary 11 June 2026Hills Face Zone (SA Planning and Design Code) The Hills Face Zone protects Adelaide's escarpment backdrop. Exempt and Accepted pathways mostly unavailable; most dwellings are Performance Assessed.
- glossary 24 May 2026Hip rafter A hip rafter runs diagonally from the ridge end to the external wall-plate corner, carries the jack rafters, and is sized from AS 1684's own hip/valley tables.
- glossary 14 May 2026Hip roof A hip roof slopes down on all four sides with hip rafters from each corner to the ridge. Stronger in wind than gable but more complex framing and higher cost.
- glossary 10 May 2026HLTAID011 HLTAID011 is the nationally recognised first aid unit required for construction site first aiders in Australia. Valid 3 years, CPR renewed annually.
- glossary 10 May 2026HMR MDF HMR MDF is high moisture-resistant medium-density fibreboard, the standard core material for internal doors, cabinetry and linings in wet and humid areas.
- glossary 8 May 2026Hob A hob is the raised threshold at the entry of a shower or wet area that contains water within the zone. NCC 2022 specifies permitted materials.
- glossary 15 May 2026Hobless shower A hobless shower is a level-entry shower mandated by NCC Part H8 for new Class 1a houses. Set-down, fall, waterproofing, and floor waste need coordination from frame.
- glossary 14 May 2026Hold point (inspection) A hold point is a stage where work must stop until a certifier signs off. Critical stage inspections (NSW), mandatory inspections (VIC). Skipping is expensive.
- glossary 10 May 2026Hold-down A hold-down is an anchor connection between a wall frame and the slab or footing below. Position is engineer-specified and cast into the slab before pour.
- glossary 30 May 2026Holding costs Holding costs are an owner's ongoing delay losses (rent, loan interest, rates, storage) that a liquidated damages rate pre-estimates; calculating them defends the rate.
- glossary 10 May 2026Holiday (membrane) A holiday is a gap or void in a waterproofing membrane where the coating missed a spot. Holidays allow water ingress through an otherwise intact membrane.
- glossary 10 May 2026Hollow core door A hollow core door has a cardboard honeycomb infill, making it lightweight and suited to low-traffic internal rooms only — not wet areas or fire-rated openings.
- glossary 4 June 2026Hollow section (SHS, RHS, CHS) A hollow section is structural steel tube, square (SHS), rectangular (RHS) or circular (CHS), to AS/NZS 1163, used for posts, beams and bracing in residential steelwork.
- glossary 25 May 2026Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) The Home Building Act 1989 is the main NSW residential building law: licensing over $5,000, contracts, statutory warranties (6/2 years), and HBCF insurance over $20,000.
- glossary 14 May 2026Home warranty insurance Home warranty insurance is the umbrella term for state-administered residential build insurance: HBCF (NSW), DBI (VIC), QBCC (QLD). Each covers different scope.
- glossary 10 May 2026Hot works Hot works are on-site tasks producing heat, sparks, or open flame: welding, cutting, grinding, brazing. Most public liability policies impose permit conditions.
- glossary 10 May 2026Hot-dip galvanised Hot-dip galvanised (HDG): steel coated by immersion in molten zinc. Minimum for outdoor bolts, coach screws, and fasteners in treated pine. AS/NZS 1214:2016.
- glossary 30 May 2026Hot-rolled steel Hot-rolled steel is formed hot into standard structural sections (UB, UC, PFC) to AS/NZS 3679.1, usually Grade 300 and designed under AS 4100, unlike cold-formed steel.
- glossary 9 June 2026House stump A house stump is a timber, concrete or steel post supporting the bearers of a raised subfloor (common in VIC and QLD); replacing failed stumps is called restumping.
- glossary 14 May 2026Housing Code (NSW) The NSW Housing Code sits inside the Codes SEPP 2008 and sets CDC eligibility rules for residential builds. Overlays (acid sulfate, flood, bushfire) gate it.
- glossary 10 May 2026HRCW (High-Risk Construction Work) HRCW stands for High-Risk Construction Work. It's a legal category under WHS Regulation reg 291 that triggers a mandatory SWMS before work starts.
- glossary 10 May 2026HSR (Health and Safety Representative) An HSR is an elected worker representative on a construction site with powers to inspect, raise safety concerns, and in some states direct unsafe work to stop.
- glossary 16 May 2026Human impact zone (glazing) Human impact zone is the location near doors and low panels in a home where occupants might fall into glazing. NCC Part 8.4 mandates Grade A safety glass in each.
- glossary 8 May 2026HVAC HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) in residential construction: how it features in NCC energy compliance and the Whole of Home budget.
- glossary 9 May 2026HWU (Hot Water Unit) HWU (hot water unit): types, NCC 2022 requirements for new Class 1 builds, Whole of Home energy scoring, and AS/NZS 3500.4 installation rules.
- glossary 2 May 2026Hydraulic plans plumbing schematic showing water, waste, stormwater layout.
- glossary 26 May 2026Hydronic heating Hydronic heating circulates heated water through radiators or in-slab loops. How it's installed, why in-slab is a slab-stage job, and its NCC energy impact.
- glossary 14 May 2026Hydrostatic pressure Hydrostatic pressure is the pressure of groundwater behind a retaining wall or below a slab. Builds when subsoil drainage fails. Causes wall blowouts.
- glossary 16 May 2026I-joist (engineered floor framing) I-joist is engineered floor or roof framing with LVL or sawn flanges and an OSB or plywood web. High strength-to-weight; volume-builder default for upper floors.
- glossary 1 June 2026IC-rated downlight An IC-rated downlight is rated for insulation contact, so ceiling batts can lay over it with no clearance gap or fire risk, unlike a non-IC fitting.
- glossary 14 May 2026icare (NSW) icare is the NSW Government insurance and care agency. Sets workers compensation premiums, administers HBCF home warranty. Every NSW builder deals with icare.
- glossary 10 May 2026Identification survey An identification survey reinstates and marks existing property boundaries using historical survey plans and field measurements. Required before building near boundaries.
- glossary 10 May 2026IGU (insulated glass unit) An IGU (insulated glass unit) is a sealed double-glazed assembly used in windows and doors. Failed IGU seals cause fogging between panes.
- glossary 28 May 2026Impact sound Impact sound is structure-borne noise from footsteps and dropped items. Why NCC F7D5 caps Ln,w at 62 between apartment units, and why it is the hard one.
- glossary 23 May 2026Impact-assessed development Impact-assessed is the most thorough planning pathway across Qld, SA, Tas: full merit against the entire scheme, public notice, third-party submission and appeal.
- glossary 10 May 2026Improvement notice A WHS inspector direction to fix a specific breach within a set timeframe. Failure to comply leads to an infringement notice or prosecution.
- glossary 16 May 2026Incipient fire spread (NCC 60-minute ceiling rating) Incipient fire spread: 60 minutes' resistance under AS 1530.3 to early fire spread through a ceiling. One of three NCC garage-to-dwelling separation options.
- glossary 1 June 2026Incomplete works cap (home warranty) An incomplete works cap is a home-warranty sub-limit (e.g. 20% of contract price under VIC DBI) on claims for completing a build the builder didn't finish.
- glossary 29 May 2026Indemnity clause (building contract) An indemnity clause shifts loss from one party to another. A broad clause can transfer risks far beyond what the indemnifier's insurance covers. Read carefully.
- glossary 3 June 2026Insolvency Insolvency is being unable to pay debts when due. It is a trigger event for home-warranty claims and a downstream risk for subbies and suppliers when a builder fails.
- glossary 1 June 2026Insulation (FRL) Insulation is the third FRL criterion: the minutes a fire-separating element keeps its far face below a temperature rise so fire can't spread by conducted heat.
- glossary 9 May 2026Integrated Development (NSW) Integrated development in NSW is a DA that also needs approval from a state agency such as Heritage NSW, the EPA, or the RFS. Expect 60 to 100+ extra days.
- glossary 1 June 2026Integrity (FRL) Integrity is the second FRL criterion: the minutes a fire-separating element resists flames and hot gases passing through gaps, the middle figure in 60/60/60.
- glossary 1 June 2026Inter-tenancy wall An inter-tenancy wall separates two dwellings and must meet an NCC acoustic target (Rw+Ctr 50+) and often a fire rating, via a tested framing, lining and batt system.
- glossaryIrrigation Irrigation is an automated watering system for garden beds and lawns. Above-ground distribution is landscaper scope; mains connection requires a licensed plumber.
- glossary 25 May 2026Isocyanate vapour: the two-pack coating hazard Isocyanate vapour from two-pack polyurethane coatings is a respiratory sensitiser that can cause occupational asthma. Spraying needs an air-supplied respirator.
- glossary 30 May 2026J1V5 (NCC Section J verification method) J1V5 is the NCC 2022 Section J verification method for Class 2 apartments, a reference-building path capping heating and cooling loads at 120% of the J1P2 thermal limits.
- glossary 25 May 2026James Hardie James Hardie is Australia's largest fibre cement manufacturer (Scyon, HardieFlex, Villaboard). Its products are asbestos-free; the company ceased asbestos in 1987.
- glossary 10 May 2026Joinery Joinery is the trade of making and installing built-in timber work: kitchens, wardrobes, doors, window frames, and fixed furniture in residential buildings.
- glossary 26 May 2026Joist hanger A joist hanger is a pressed-steel bracket that carries a floor or deck joist end at a bearer or ledger. Sizing, fixing rules, and face-fix vs top-flange.
- glossary 16 May 2026Judgment debt Judgment debt is a debt recognised by court order, or under SOPA by registration of an adjudication certificate. Triggers garnishee, writ, and bankruptcy paths.
- glossary 16 May 2026Kiln-dried timber (KD) Kiln-dried timber is dried in a controlled kiln to 10-15% moisture content, delivering dimensional stability and higher F-grades than green or air-dried stock.
- glossary 16 May 2026Klip-Lok roofing profile Klip-Lok is Lysaght's concealed-clip standing-seam steel roofing profile: 41 mm rib, 1 degree minimum pitch, the premium low-pitch contemporary choice.
- glossary 10 May 2026Knockdown-rebuild Knockdown-rebuild (KDR): demolishing an existing house and building a new one on the same block. Common alternative to major renovation on established sites.
- glossary 10 May 2026Laitance Laitance: weak surface layer of cement and fine particles on concrete or screed. Must be removed before tiling, adhesive fixing, or waterproofing membrane application.
- glossary 30 May 2026Lamella A lamella is a layer of graded timber (35-45 mm) glued into a glulam or CLT member; stronger lamellae go in the high-stress outer zones for consistent strength.
- glossary 8 May 2026laminated glass Laminated glass bonds panes with a plastic interlayer. Holds together when broken; required in glass balustrades above 5m and overhead glazing under AS 1288:2021.
- glossary 23 May 2026Land and Environment Court (LEC, NSW) The NSW Land and Environment Court hears planning appeals, third-party objector appeals on designated development, and merit reviews of DA decisions.
- glossary 4 June 2026Land division (SA) Land division is the South Australian word for subdivision: dividing land into lots, assessed via PlanSA and needing its own consent and certificate before titles issue.
- glossary 1 June 2026Landing (stairs) A landing is a level platform within or at the ends of a stair, required after 18 risers and at top and bottom, sized for safe footing and accessible manoeuvring.
- glossaryLandscape plan A landscape plan is a scaled drawing showing the layout of hard and soft landscaping for a residential project. Required for quoting and council DA conditions.
- glossary 29 May 2026Landscaped area Landscaped area is the percentage of a residential lot the LEP or DCP requires as planted ground. How it differs from deep soil, and what counts vs what doesn't.
- glossary 30 May 2026Lap length Lap length is the overlap where two reo bars or mesh sheets splice so load transfers continuously; short laps fail in bending and are a common pre-pour fail.
- glossary 29 May 2026Large-format tile A large-format tile is a ceramic or porcelain tile 600 mm or more in either direction. Why it needs back-buttering, flatter substrate, and a bigger notched trowel.
- glossary 25 May 2026Last-resort home warranty Australian home warranty (HBCF, DBI, QHWS) is last-resort: it only pays if the builder dies, disappears, or goes insolvent. It is not first-resort defect insurance.
- glossary 9 May 2026Latent conditions Latent conditions are hidden or unforeseen site conditions discovered during construction that differ from what could reasonably be anticipated at contract signing.
- glossary 8 May 2026Layback A layback is the flattened section of kerb and channel that allows vehicles to cross from road to driveway. Council approval required before construction.
- glossary 10 May 2026LEL (Lower Explosive Limit) LEL is the lowest concentration of flammable gas in air that can ignite. In confined space work, gas levels must stay below 5% LEL for safe entry.
- glossary 8 May 2026LEP (Local Environmental Plan) What an LEP is in NSW: the council-level planning rulebook that sets zones, land uses, and development controls for a local government area.
- glossary 8 May 2026Letter of Eligibility (LOE) A Letter of Eligibility (LOE) confirms a Victorian builder is approved to buy Domestic Building Insurance (DBI). Required at registration renewal and before deposits.
- glossary 16 May 2026Lever handle (DDA-compliant door hardware) Lever handle is the AS 1428.1 door hardware that opens with the wrist, no grip or twist, under 19.5 N force. Mandatory on Class 2-9; defaulting on Class 1a builds.
- glossary 10 May 2026LGS (light gauge steel) LGS is light gauge cold-formed steel used for wall, floor and roof framing in Australian residential buildings. Governed by AS/NZS 4600 and the NASH Standard.
- glossary 9 June 2026Licensing demerit points Demerit points are points a building regulator (e.g. QBCC) records against a licensee for breaches; accumulated points trigger licence suspension or cancellation.
- glossary 3 June 2026Lift plan A lift plan is the written plan for a non-trivial crane lift, covering load weight, rigging, ground bearing, swept path and an exclusion zone, integrated with the SWMS.
- glossary 30 May 2026Limitation period A limitation period is the fixed time to start a claim; once it expires the claim is time-barred. NSW warranties run 6 years (major) and 2 years for other defects.
- glossary 8 May 2026Lintel A lintel is the structural member spanning over a door or window opening in a wall frame, transferring load around the opening to the studs on each side.
- glossary 10 May 2026Lippage Lippage: the vertical face-level difference between adjacent tiles or stone panels. Excessive lippage is a tiling defect assessed at practical completion against HIA tole
- glossary 14 May 2026Liquid-applied membrane A liquid-applied membrane is brushed, rolled, or sprayed onto the substrate. Polyurethane, bitumen, or acrylic. Better for complex junctions than sheet systems.
- glossary 2 May 2026Liquidated damages pre-agreed daily $ payable by builder if project runs late.
- glossary 11 June 2026Liquidation Liquidation winds up a company and triggers home-warranty claims. Subbies are unsecured creditors and typically recover little when a head contractor folds.
- glossary 4 June 2026Livable Housing Design Livable Housing Design is the NCC's accessibility baseline for new homes (step-free entry, wider doors, reinforced bathroom walls), now mandatory in adopting states.
- glossary 9 May 2026Livable Housing Silver accessibility provisions in NCC 2022 (mandatory in VIC for new dwellings since Oct 2023).
- glossary 1 June 2026Live load Live load is the variable imposed load from occupants, furniture and use, set by AS/NZS 1170.1 and combined with dead and wind loads in design. Also called imposed load.
- glossary 4 June 2026Load path A load path is the continuous route building loads take from where they are applied down through the structure to the founding soil; a break anywhere is a failure point.
- glossary 16 May 2026Load width (framing) Load width is the horizontal roof or floor distance a framing member carries to a beam or wall. One of four critical AS 1684 span-table inputs; most common error.
- glossary 24 May 2026Load-bearing wall A load-bearing wall carries structural load from above down to the footing. How it differs from a partition, how to identify one, and why removal needs an engineer.
- glossary 25 May 2026Local exhaust ventilation (LEV) LEV is an engineering control that captures dust and fumes at the source before they reach the breathing zone. Hood, ducting, filter, fan. Above PPE in the hierarchy.
- glossary 9 May 2026Local Planning Panel (LPP) What an LPP is in NSW: independent panel that determines DAs above council thresholds or involving conflict of interest, heritage demolition, or high objection volumes.
- glossary 23 May 2026Local Planning Scheme (LPS, WA) WA Local Planning Scheme is the council-level planning instrument under PDA 2005 (WA). Sets zoning, development standards, calls up SPP 7.3 R-Codes.
- glossary 23 May 2026Local Provisions Schedule (LPS, Tasmania) The Tasmanian Planning Scheme has two layers: state-wide SPPs + each council's Local Provisions Schedule mapping zones, Particular Purpose Zones, and SAPs.
- glossary 10 May 2026Location certificate A location certificate documents where a structure sits relative to property boundaries and setbacks. Required by certifiers before occupation certificate in most states.
- glossary 30 May 2026Lock-up stage Lock-up stage is when external cladding, roof, doors and windows are fixed so the building can be locked, a defined HIA/MBA progress-claim stage.
- glossary 14 May 2026LOSP (Light Organic Solvent Preservative) LOSP is the Light Organic Solvent Preservative system for H2 and H3 timber treatment. Cleaner finish than CCA, gluable, paintable. Pine framing standard.
- glossary 28 May 2026Low Rise Housing Diversity Code (NSW) The Low Rise Housing Diversity Code is the NSW CDC pathway for dual occupancies, manor houses, and terraces under Codes SEPP 2008. How it differs from the Housing Code.
- glossary 30 May 2026Low-modulus sealant A low-modulus sealant deforms under low stress to take large cyclic movement (often +/-50%) without tearing the substrate, the right pick for masonry articulation joints.
- glossary 2 May 2026Lump sum contract fixed price for a defined scope.
- glossary 8 May 2026LVL (Laminated Veneer Lumber) LVL is a high-strength engineered timber product used for lintels, beams, and long-span members. Not covered by AS 1684 span tables; uses manufacturer-certified sizing.
- glossary 25 May 2026Lysaght Lysaght is BlueScope's metal roofing and cladding brand, the default spec on most Australian residential roofs. Its Custom Orb, Trimdek, and Klip-Lok profiles.
- glossary 14 May 2026m² rate An m² rate is the per-square-metre price for area-based trade work: plasterboard, tiling, painting, screeds. Distinct from lump sum and lineal metre rate.
- glossary 3 June 2026Major defect A major defect affects a building's structure, safety or use and carries the longer statutory warranty period (6 years in NSW, versus 2 years for other defects).
- glossary 16 May 2026Major defects (statutory warranty) Major defects under HBA s.18E (NSW) carry 6-year statutory warranty and HBCF cover. Load-bearing failure, fire safety, waterproofing causing structural damage.
- glossary 6 May 2026Make good What 'make good' actually means in a building contract, why it's risky to leave undefined, and what to write instead so the scope is testable.
- glossary 14 May 2026Masonry leaf A masonry leaf is one vertical layer of brick or block in a wall. Cavity masonry has two leaves with air gap; brick veneer has one leaf over a framed inner skin.
- glossary 8 May 2026Masonry veneer Masonry veneer: a single masonry leaf tied to a separate structural frame (timber or steel). The frame carries loads; the masonry cladds. Must not exceed 8.5 m height.
- glossary 10 May 2026Mass-loaded vinyl (MLV) Mass-loaded vinyl (MLV) is a dense flexible barrier sheet used to add acoustic mass to walls and ceilings. Australian builder's guide to MLV uses and limits.
- glossary 9 May 2026Mastic Mastic is a thick, paste-like adhesive or sealant used in construction to bond panels, seal joints, and fill gaps. Common as a panel adhesive and cornice compound.
- glossary 14 May 2026MBA (Master Builders Association) MBA is the Master Builders Association, the residential-builder industry body in Australia. Publishes the MBA contract suite and represents builders to government.
- glossary 2 May 2026MBA contracts Master Builders Association contracts.
- glossary 2 June 2026Mechanical ventilation Mechanical ventilation is powered air extraction or supply used to meet the NCC where a room can't get enough natural ventilation through openable windows.
- glossary 1 June 2026Mechanically fastened (membrane roof) Mechanically fastened is a flat-roof membrane method using fasteners and stress plates along the seams rather than adhesive, reliant on the fixing pattern for uplift.
- glossary 28 May 2026Mediation (building dispute) Mediation is a facilitated negotiation where an independent mediator helps the parties to a building dispute reach their own settlement. Not binding unless agreed.
- glossary 5 May 2026MEN system (Multiple Earthed Neutral) MEN (Multiple Earthed Neutral) is the earthing system used across Australian and NZ low-voltage installations under AS/NZS 3000 Section 5.
- glossary 8 May 2026Merbau Merbau: a dense tropical hardwood widely used for decking in Australia. Durability Class 1 above-ground, Janka 8.5 kN. Available as 90x19 and 140x19 mm boards.
- glossary 16 May 2026Merit assessment (DA, NSW) Merit assessment is the NSW DA decision under EP&A Act s4.15 weighing LEP, DCP, SEPPs, impacts, suitability, public submissions, and public interest.
- glossary 25 May 2026Metal strap bracing Metal strap bracing is a tensioned wall-brace type under AS 1684.2 (about 1.5 kN/m). Installed in opposed pairs at 30 to 60 degrees, and it must be tensioned to work.
- glossaryMFR MFR (Minimum Financial Requirements) are the QBCC's financial standards that Queensland contractor licensees must meet at all times, covering NTA and current ratio tests.
- glossary 8 May 2026MGP10 MGP10: machine graded pine with a characteristic bending strength used in AS 1684 span tables for residential framing. Common grades: MGP10, MGP12, MGP15.
- glossary 14 May 2026MGP12 MGP12 is machine-graded pine with a characteristic modulus of 12,000 MPa, roughly F8. Used for bearers, lintels, longer-span floor joists where MGP10 spans run short.
- glossary 16 May 2026Mineral fibre (fire-stop) Mineral fibre is non-combustible inorganic fibre (rockwool, glass-wool) packed around service penetrations through fire-rated walls. Maintains FRL up to 2,000 mm².
- glossary 26 May 2026Mitre joint A mitre joint cuts two pieces at matching angles to form a corner, 45 degrees for a square one. When to mitre and when to scribe instead.
- glossary 11 June 2026Mobile crane A mobile crane is a wheeled or tracked crane set up per lift using outriggers, a load chart, and a lift plan. HRWL classes C2, C6, C1, C0 and CN apply.
- glossary 29 May 2026Model WHS Act Model WHS Act is Safe Work Australia's 2011 template adopted by NSW, QLD, WA, SA, TAS, NT, ACT. Victoria stayed on its OHS Act 2004. The distinction matters.
- glossaryModern award A modern award sets minimum pay rates, penalties, allowances and conditions for employees in an industry or occupation under the Fair Work Act 2009.
- glossary 28 May 2026Modulus of elasticity (MOE) Modulus of elasticity (MOE) is a material's stiffness, in MPa or GPa. For pine framing, the MGP number IS a rounded MOE in GPa. Distinct from bending strength.
- glossary 16 May 2026Moist cure (concrete) Moist cure keeps fresh concrete surfaces continuously damp for at least 7 days. Dry cure halves 28-day strength and triggers shrinkage cracking. ABCB 4.2 / AS 3600.
- glossary 14 May 2026Moisture content (MC) Moisture content is the weight of water in timber as a percentage of oven-dry weight. AS 1080.1 test method. EMC, KD seasoning, and on-site MC checks for builders.
- glossary 16 May 2026Moisture management (residential walls) Moisture management is the integrated design that keeps liquid water out and lets vapour escape: flashings, drained cavity, AS 4200 class, insulation, NCC Part 10.8.
- glossary 30 May 2026Monolithic pour A monolithic pour casts a slab and its beams together in one continuous pour so they act as one element, avoiding the cold joint that would weaken a raft slab.
- glossary 14 May 2026Mortar bed (tiling) A mortar bed is a 10 mm+ cement-based bedding layer for natural stone, large-format tile, and external paving on screed. Distinct from thin-bed tile adhesive.
- glossary 14 May 2026Mortar joint (profile) Mortar joint profile (struck, raked, weather-struck, ironed) affects weather performance and appearance. AS 3700 sets 10 mm nominal joint width and finish rules.
- glossary 16 May 2026Mortar mix (NCC classification) NCC Housing Provisions Table 5.6.3 sets three mortar mixes: Protected 1:2:9, GP 1:1:6, Exposure 1:0.5:4.5. Over-strong mortar locks in movement, spalls brick.
- glossary 16 May 2026Movement joint Movement joint covers control, expansion, articulation joints absorbing thermal, moisture, or structural movement. AS 3958 mandates them in tile fields.
- glossary 14 May 2026Mr Fluffy Mr Fluffy is loose-fill amosite asbestos blown into ceilings of ACT and southern NSW homes 1968-1978. Highly friable. ACT and NSW have specialist buyback schemes.
- glossary 29 May 2026MS polymer sealant MS polymer is a modified silyl polymer sealant: paintable, low-VOC, bonds to most substrates without primer. Hybrid alternative to silicone and polyurethane.
- glossary 11 June 2026Multiple dwelling Multiple dwelling means different things in WA and QLD. WA: stacked dwellings, R-Codes Volume 2. QLD: 3 or more dwellings including townhouses and apartments.
- glossary 14 May 2026Municipal Building Surveyor (VIC) A Municipal Building Surveyor is the council-employed registered building surveyor in Victoria. MBS-only powers, Building Act 1993, RBS role explained for builders.
- glossary 15 May 2026Mutual recognition (builder licensing) Builder mutual recognition between Australian states: traditional MR (apply) vs Automatic Mutual Recognition (deemed). ACT construction exempt to 2027.
- glossary 1 June 2026Nailplate A nailplate is a pressed steel plate with integral teeth punched into timber to connect truss joints; its position and embedment are designed, and side-loading voids it.
- glossary 14 May 2026NASH Standard NASH publishes Australia's residential steel framing standards. NCC 2022 H1D6 accepts NASH Parts 1 and 2 as DTS for LGS framing in Class 1 buildings.
- glossary 25 May 2026NATA-accredited laboratory A NATA-accredited lab is accredited by the National Association of Testing Authorities. Soil, concrete, asbestos, and acoustic test results often must come from one.
- glossary 8 May 2026NatHERS (Nationwide House Energy Rating Scheme) NatHERS is Australia's house energy rating scheme. NCC 2022 requires new Class 1 homes to achieve 7 stars under NatHERS or an equivalent compliance path.
- glossary 25 May 2026National criminal history check (builder licensing) A national criminal history check is the police check most states require for a builder licence renewal. It feeds the fitness-and-propriety assessment. What to know.
- glossary 8 May 2026NCAT (NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal) NCAT is the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal, the primary forum for resolving residential building disputes in NSW including defects, payment, and warranty claims.
- glossary 2 May 2026NCC the building code governing all construction in Australia.
- glossary 28 May 2026NCC Part H5 (safe movement and access) NCC Part H5 sets the two safe-movement performance requirements for Class 1 buildings: stairs and ramps (H5P1), and fall-prevention barriers above 1 m (H5P2).
- glossary 8 May 2026NCIF (National Construction Industry Forum) The NCIF is a statutory advisory body that replaced the ABCC's consultative role. Established 1 July 2023 under the Fair Work Act. No enforcement powers.
- glossary 11 June 2026Neighbourhood plan (Brisbane City Plan) A neighbourhood plan is a precinct code in Brisbane City Plan 2014 that overrides zone defaults for a defined area. Check it before assuming zone controls apply.
- glossary 10 May 2026NER (National Engineering Register) The NER is Engineers Australia's voluntary register for engineers with 5+ years post-graduate experience and a passed peer competency assessment.
- glossary 11 May 2026Neutral cure silicone Neutral cure silicone releases alcohol during curing rather than acetic acid, making it safe on stone, copper, and waterproofing membranes.
- glossary 2 May 2026Niche recessed shelf in shower wall.
- glossary 6 May 2026Noggings What noggings are, why they're fixed between studs in a timber wall frame, and how AS 1684 governs their use for restraint, sheet fixing, and blocking.
- glossary 10 May 2026Nominal fixing Nominal fixing is the standard AS 1684 nailing schedule for low-wind areas. Specific fixing uses calculated hardware for N3/N4 and cyclonic wind classifications.
- glossary 10 May 2026Non-climbable zone (NCZ) Non-climbable zone (NCZ): the clear arc outside a pool fence where no objects may assist climbing. AS 1926.1 sets the 900 mm requirement.
- glossary 14 May 2026Non-combustible material A non-combustible material in NCC terms passes the AS 1530.1 test or sits in the deemed-non-combustible list. Required in NCC H3 fire and H7 bushfire areas.
- glossary 9 May 2026Non-habitable A non-habitable building is one not designed for people to live or sleep in. Class 10a garages, sheds, and carports are the most common residential example under the NCC.
- glossary 29 May 2026Non-repellent termiticide A non-repellent termiticide (fipronil, imidacloprid) cannot be detected by termites, who forage through and carry a lethal dose back to the colony.
- glossary 7 May 2026Nosing A stair nosing is the projecting front edge of a tread. NCC balustrade heights and handrail heights are measured from the nosing line, not the floor.
- glossary 14 May 2026Notched trowel A notched trowel lays tile adhesive in controlled-depth ridges. Notch size (6, 10, 12 mm) chosen for tile size. Wrong notch causes low coverage and hollow tiles.
- glossary 9 May 2026Notice of Commencement Notice of Commencement in NSW: give 2 days' notice to council and your PCA before building starts, lodged via the NSW Planning Portal. QLD and VIC equivalents explained.
- glossary 29 May 2026Notice of Intention (WA plumbing) A Notice of Intention (NOI) is the pre-work notification a WA licensed plumber lodges with Building and Energy before commencing notifiable plumbing work.
- glossary 29 May 2026Notice of Work (NSW plumbing) A Notice of Work (NoW) is the pre-work notification a NSW licensed plumber lodges with NSW Fair Trading before starting notifiable plumbing or drainage work.
- glossary 1 June 2026Notice to rectify A notice to rectify requires the builder to fix defective work within a stated time, the contract counterpart to a regulator's direction to rectify.
- glossary 10 May 2026Notifiable incident A notifiable incident is a death, serious injury, or dangerous event on site that must be reported to the WHS regulator immediately and in writing within 48 hours.
- glossary 9 May 2026Notifiable work (QBCC Form 4) Notifiable work in Queensland is plumbing in existing buildings that skips council permits but requires QBCC Form 4 within 10 business days of invoicing.
- glossary 16 May 2026Novation Novation is the substitution of one contracting party for another with the consent of all parties. Used in construction to transfer consultant contracts to the builder.
- glossary 29 May 2026NSW Planning Portal The NSW Planning Portal is the mandatory online system for DAs, CDCs, CCs, OCs, and DBP Act declarations. Council-direct paper lodgement is no longer accepted.
- glossary 23 May 2026NT Planning Scheme 2020 Northern Territory's single statutory planning instrument covering all NT except Jabiru. Territory-government assessment; no council planning powers. Zones in Part 4.
- glossaryNTA NTA (Net Tangible Assets) is the QBCC financial measure used to determine a contractor's maximum revenue category and licence eligibility in Queensland.
- glossary 7 May 2026OC (Occupation Certificate) What an Occupation Certificate (OC) is in NSW, who issues it, what you need before the PCA can sign it off, and why it matters for handover and finance.
- glossary 16 May 2026Occupancy Permit (Victoria) Occupancy Permit (OP) is issued by the RBS in Vic under Building Act 1993 confirming a building is fit to occupy. No OP, no move-in. NSW equivalent: OC.
- glossary 30 May 2026Occupation boundary The occupation boundary is where the fence sits; the title boundary is the surveyed line. On older lots they can be 300-600 mm apart, a costly setout trap.
- glossary 14 May 2026Occupation Certificate: Interim vs Final Interim Occupation Certificate (IOC) permits partial occupation; Final Occupation Certificate (FOC) covers complete works. Distinct rules and risk profiles for builders.
- glossary 16 May 2026Occurrence basis (insurance trigger) Occurrence-basis insurance triggers on when the incident occurred, not when the claim is made. Standard for public and products liability. Opposite of claims-made.
- glossary 10 May 2026Offset peg An offset peg is a survey mark placed at a known distance from a building corner so builders can re-establish the exact corner position after excavation destroys the orig
- glossary 8 May 2026OFSC (Office of the Federal Safety Commissioner) The OFSC administers the WHS Accreditation Scheme for Commonwealth-funded building work over $4 million. Single dwelling houses are exempt regardless of value.
- glossary 29 May 2026OHS Act (Victoria) OHS Act 2004 is Victoria's pre-harmonisation workplace safety law. VIC didn't adopt the Model WHS Act; uses employer (not PCBU) and different section numbers.
- glossary 1 June 2026Omissions Omissions are minor incomplete items (and deduction variations that remove scope) that don't bar practical completion but go on the defects list to close out later.
- glossary 1 June 2026On-sell (owner-builder) On-selling is selling a property within the owner-builder disclosure window (NSW 7.5yr, VIC 6.5yr, QLD 6yr), which triggers a mandatory consumer warning to the buyer.
- glossary 23 May 2026On-site Award (MA000020) Building and Construction General On-site Award MA000020 sets minimum wages and conditions for AU building industry. CW1-CW8 classes, apprentice rates, allowances.
- glossary 24 May 2026On-tool dust extraction On-tool dust extraction is LEV fitted to a power tool (hood plus M or H class vacuum) that captures silica dust as it's cut, before it reaches the breathing zone.
- glossary 9 May 2026Open time Open time is the window after applying an adhesive during which the surfaces must be joined for a good bond. Applying after open time yields a weak bond.
- glossary 1 June 2026Openable area (ventilation) Openable area is the minimum openable window or door area a habitable room needs for natural ventilation under the NCC, at least 5% of floor area on the DTS path.
- glossary 1 June 2026Opening protection (fire) Opening protection (fire doors, dampers, collars) keeps a fire wall's rating where an opening or service penetrates it, most often missed at the garage-to-house door.
- glossary 16 May 2026Operating force (AS 2047 windows/doors) Operating force test under AS 2047 measures the force to open and close sliding sashes and hinged sashes. Caps usability; common coastal failure mode.
- glossary 14 May 2026Ordinary Time Earnings (OTE) OTE is wages for normal hours including most allowances but excluding overtime. Super at 12% is paid on OTE, not gross wages. Common confusion in apprentice payroll.
- glossary 9 May 2026OSD (on-site detention) OSD is temporary stormwater storage required by many NSW councils for new dwellings. A hydraulic engineer sizes the tank; council DCP sets the PSD and SSR values.
- glossary 23 May 2026Outdoor Living Area (OLA) OLA is the defined private outdoor space per dwelling under residential codes. WA R-Codes: 30 m² + 4 m dimension. Vic ResCode: similar. NSW DCP-dependent.
- glossary 4 June 2026Outgoings Outgoings are the property running costs (rates, water, insurance, owners-corporation levies, land tax) a commercial tenant reimburses on top of base rent.
- glossary 3 June 2026Outrigger Outriggers are the hydraulic legs a mobile crane extends to spread its load and stabilise for lifting; they need confirmed ground bearing and pads, or the crane tips.
- glossary 1 June 2026Overflow provision (gutters) An overflow provision is a designed overflow (high-front gutter, slots, scupper) sized for the 1% AEP storm so a blocked outlet sheds water clear of the building.
- glossary 1 June 2026Overland flow Overland flow is the path stormwater takes over the surface when underground drainage is exceeded; the design must direct it safely away from buildings.
- glossary 8 May 2026Owner-builder An owner-builder is a property owner who manages their own construction without a licensed builder. Permit rules, thresholds and risks vary by state.
- glossary 24 May 2026Owner-occupier (residential construction contract) An owner-occupier contract is for a home the owner will live in. The status changes Security of Payment timeframes, supporting-statement forms and consumer protections.
- glossary 9 June 2026Owner-occupier (Security of Payment) Under some Security of Payment Acts, an owner-occupier (a homeowner living in the home) is carved out of head-contractor claims, but subbies stay covered.
- glossary 4 June 2026Owners corporation An owners corporation (body corporate) is the legal body of all lot owners in a strata or community scheme that manages and maintains the common property.
- glossary 15 May 2026Pad footing Pad footing is an isolated reinforced concrete pad under a single concentrated load: a post, pier or column. Sized to bearing capacity under AS 2870.
- glossary 14 May 2026Pad level Pad level is the Reduced Level of the earthworks pad after cut, fill, and compaction, before footings. Typical tolerance ±25 mm. Confirmed by the surveyor.
- glossary 30 May 2026Paint-grade (timber) Paint-grade timber is chosen to take and hold paint (straight grain, low resin, sands clean), not for a clear finish; dark red meranti is the volume joinery example.
- glossary 14 May 2026Panel lifter A panel lifter is a wheeled hoist that holds a plasterboard sheet at ceiling height for one-worker fixing. WorkSafe VIC recommends for any ceiling install.
- glossary 10 May 2026PAPR (Powered Air-Purifying Respirator) A PAPR is a battery-powered respirator delivering filtered air via a loose hood. Used when tight-fitting P2 masks cannot seal, including for workers with facial hair.
- glossary 11 June 2026Parallel flange channel (PFC) PFC (parallel flange channel) is the hot-rolled C-section steel used for residential lintels. Grade 300, AS/NZS 3679.1, sizes 75 to 380 PFC.
- glossary 28 May 2026Parapet A parapet is the short wall continuing past the roof line on a flat or low-pitch roof, where the waterproofing membrane turns up and seals to its inside face.
- glossary 16 May 2026Pattern Book (NSW Housing) NSW Housing Pattern Book is a suite of pre-designed dwellings. CDC applications using Pattern Book designs target a 10-day determination (vs standard 20-day CDC).
- glossary 23 May 2026Pay-when-paid clause Pay-when-paid clauses make subbie payment conditional on the head contractor being paid by the principal. Void under NSW SOPA s.12 and equivalent state Acts.
- glossary 14 May 2026Payday Super Payday Super requires SG contributions to reach the fund within 7 business days of each payday from 1 July 2026. Replaces quarterly cycle. Tougher SGC penalties.
- glossary 10 May 2026PAYG withholding PAYG withholding is the system where payers deduct tax from wages or contractor payments before they are made. 47% is withheld when no ABN is quoted.
- glossary 15 May 2026Payment claim (Security of Payment Act) A payment claim is the statutory form of invoice under each state's Security of Payment Act. Specific content rules apply, distinct from a generic invoice.
- glossary 1 June 2026Payment period (Security of Payment) The payment period is the cycle (usually monthly) a Security of Payment claim covers; miss the adjudication window and the statutory remedy for that period is lost.
- glossary 10 May 2026Payment schedule Written response to a progress claim stating the scheduled payment and reasons for shortfall. In NSW must be served within 10 business days or the full amount falls due.
- glossary 25 May 2026Payroll tax (builder) Payroll tax is a state tax on wages above a threshold. Builders hit it via subbie payments deemed wages and grouping. State thresholds and rates for 2025-26.
- glossary 2 May 2026PC sum supply allowance for an item where the actual product hasn't been chosen yet (e.g.
- glossary 6 May 2026PCA (Principal Certifying Authority) What a PCA is in NSW, what they certify (CC, OC, mandatory inspections), and where the role sits between Council and the builder under the EP&A Act.
- glossary 10 May 2026PCBU (Person Conducting a Business or Undertaking) PCBU: the primary duty holder under Australia's harmonised WHS laws. On site this is typically the builder or each subcontractor running their own business.
- glossary 2 May 2026PCI (Practical Completion Inspection) PCI is the walkthrough at practical completion where the client inspects finished work, judges it against tolerances, and records the defects list.
- glossary 14 May 2026Penalty unit A penalty unit is the indexed dollar value fines are quoted in. Cth $330, NSW $110 (May 2026). Multiply by offence count for the maximum fine.
- glossary 16 May 2026Performance label (AS 2047 windows/doors) AS 2047 performance label is permanently affixed to every window/external glazed door showing wind class, water rating, air rating. No label, no install.
- glossary 4 June 2026Performance requirement (NCC) A performance requirement is the mandatory outcome a design must meet in the NCC, satisfied either by the Deemed-to-Satisfy provisions or by a Performance Solution.
- glossary 4 May 2026Performance Solution A Performance Solution is the NCC alternative compliance pathway: an expert report shows the design meets the Performance Requirement without using DTS.
- glossary 9 June 2026Performance-assessed development (SA) In SA, performance-assessed development is the pathway where work not meeting all Deemed-to-Satisfy criteria is assessed on merit against the Planning and Design Code.
- glossary 11 June 2026Perimeter drain A perimeter drain is a slotted ag pipe in aggregate around a slab or retaining wall footing, intercepting groundwater before it reaches the footing zone.
- glossary 16 May 2026Perimeter joint (tile) A perimeter joint is the flexible-sealed gap at walls/columns around a tiled floor. AS 3958 requires it; must not be filled with rigid grout. Prevents tile cracking.
- glossary 9 June 2026Permit authority In WA the permit authority is the local government that issues building permits under the Building Act 2011, distinct from the certifier who certifies design compliance.
- glossary 4 June 2026Permitted use Permitted use is whether a proposed land use is allowed (with or without consent) or prohibited in a lot's zone, the gate before any development standard is considered.
- glossary 7 May 2026Perpend Perpend: the vertical mortar joint between bricks in a course. Consistent perpend alignment is a workmanship marker in residential bricklaying.
- glossary 15 May 2026Pest management technician A pest management technician is the licensed trade installing termite barriers and treating timber. State-licensed (NSW EPA, Vic, Qld DAF) with insurance requirements.
- glossary 14 May 2026Photoelectric smoke alarm Photoelectric smoke alarm: light-scatter sensor used in residential dwellings. AS 3786 compliant; Queensland mandates photoelectric-only by 1 January 2027.
- glossary 11 June 2026Pilot hole Pilot hole: pre-drilled guide for a fastener. Sizing rules for coach screws in softwood and hardwood, and when structural screws remove the need.
- glossary 1 June 2026PIR insulation PIR (polyisocyanurate) is a high-performance closed-cell rigid board, about double the R-value of glasswool for the same thickness, usually foil-faced.
- glossary 1 June 2026Plan of subdivision (PS) A plan of subdivision (PS) is the Victorian survey plan that creates new titles once council issues a Statement of Compliance and Land Use Victoria registers it.
- glossary 23 May 2026Planning and Design Code (SA) SA's single statewide planning instrument replaced 72 council Development Plans on 19 March 2021. Zones, subzones, overlays, TNVs in one document under PDI Act.
- glossary 4 June 2026Planning consent (SA) Planning consent is the first stage of an SA development approval, assessing the proposal against the Planning and Design Code, granted before building rules consent.
- glossary 11 June 2026Planning property report (VIC) A planning property report is a free Victorian Government PDF listing a lot's zone, overlays and planning constraints, generated via VicPlan in seconds.
- glossary 28 May 2026PlanSA portal PlanSA is South Australia's online portal for lodging and tracking every development application under the PDI Act 2016. What it is, what routes through it.
- glossary 11 June 2026Plant room A plant room houses a building's AHUs, pumps, switchboards, and lift motors. NCC C3D13 sets FRL separation, acoustic, ventilation, and access rules.
- glossary 23 May 2026Plot ratio (WA R-Codes) Plot ratio is the WA equivalent of FSR, defined in R-Codes Volume 1 Part C. Applies to grouped + multiple dwellings R30+. Single houses controlled by site coverage.
- glossary 5 May 2026Plumbing Certificate of Compliance (CoC) What a plumbing Certificate of Compliance is, who issues it, why it matters, state-by-state form names.
- glossary 9 May 2026PMF (probable maximum flood) The PMF is the largest conceivable flood for a catchment, used in NSW to define flood-prone land and the outer boundary of flood planning controls.
- glossary 11 June 2026Podium level building A podium building has concrete lower levels (carpark or retail) carrying lightweight apartments above. The podium deck is the critical waterproofing zone.
- glossary 16 May 2026Pointing (ridge tiles) Pointing is the mortar or flexible polymer compound applied over ridge bedding on tiled roofs to seal and finish. Flexible acrylic is the new-work default.
- glossary 28 May 2026Ponding (flat roofs) Ponding is standing water left on a flat or low-pitch roof after rain. Each 25 mm adds 25 kg/m2; AS 4654.2 sets a 48-hour drainage benchmark for non-compliance.
- glossary 10 May 2026Pool safety certificate Pool safety certificate: the mandatory compliance document required in QLD, NSW, and VIC for pool sales, leases, and ongoing maintenance obligations.
- glossary 1 June 2026Portal frame A portal frame is columns rigidly connected to rafters, resisting load through moment connections; the standard system for sheds and wide clear-span spaces, to AS 4100.
- glossary 9 May 2026Positive covenant A positive covenant requires the landowner to do something: maintain a fence, manage stormwater, or contribute to shared infrastructure. Registered on NSW title.
- glossary 10 May 2026Post base Post base: metal connector that fixes a timber post to a concrete footing or slab, with a standoff to prevent end-grain moisture contact. Deck and pergola use.
- glossary 30 May 2026Post-installed anchor A post-installed anchor is set into hardened concrete after the pour (mechanical or chemical), unlike a cast-in fastening; structural ones are designed under AS 5216.
- glossary 9 May 2026Pot life Pot life is the time after mixing a two-part adhesive or resin during which it can still be applied. Beyond pot life the mix hardens in the container.
- glossary 11 June 2026Powder coating Powder coating electrostatically applies polyester or epoxy powder, cured at ~200C. Covers AS 3715 durability classes, coastal limits, and duplex systems.
- glossary 10 May 2026PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) PPE is the last line of defence in the hierarchy of controls. Understand when PPE is required on a residential build and what WHS obligations apply.
- glossary 2 May 2026Practical completion the milestone when works are sufficiently complete for the client to occupy.
- glossary 24 May 2026Practical completion notice The builder's written notice that works have reached practical completion. Triggers handover, final payment, and the start of the defects liability period.
- glossary 1 June 2026Pre-demolition survey A pre-demolition survey (hazmat survey) identifies asbestos and other hazardous materials in a building before demolition so they can be safely removed first.
- glossary 14 May 2026Pre-lining inspection Pre-lining is the certifier and trade walk-through after first fix, before linings. Verifies cables, pipes, ducts, noggings vs the drawings.
- glossary 16 May 2026Pre-pour inspection (slab) Pre-pour inspection is the certifier hold-point before slab concrete is poured: subgrade, formwork, reo, vapour barrier, termite cert, service penetrations.
- glossary 10 May 2026Pre-start (pre-start meeting) A pre-start meeting is a short on-site safety briefing held before work begins each day or shift, used to satisfy WHS consultation obligations in Australia.
- glossary 11 June 2026Precast concrete Precast concrete: wall panels, hollowcore planks, beams, stairs cast in a factory then craned in. AS 3850 governs lifting anchors and the HRCW safety regime.
- glossary 8 May 2026Premises Standards The Premises Standards (Disability Access to Premises-Buildings 2010) set the access features public buildings must provide under the DDA. AS 1428.1 is the reference.
- glossary 8 May 2026Prescribed building works Prescribed building works in the NT are residential construction jobs over $12,000 that trigger BPB registration and Fidelity Fund Certificate requirements.
- glossary 11 June 2026Prestressed concrete Prestressed concrete tensions steel so the section starts in compression before load. Pre-tensioned for precast planks; post-tensioned for slabs. AS 3600.
- glossary 4 June 2026Primer (paint) A primer is the first paint coat that bonds to the substrate, seals it, and gives topcoats something to grip; the right primer is matched to the surface, not generic.
- glossary 10 June 2026Principal (contract party) The principal is the owner or developer who engages the head contractor, issues instructions, assesses progress claims and certifies payment.
- glossary 28 May 2026Principal Certifier (NSW) The Principal Certifier (PC) is NSW's statutory certifier, appointed by the owner to run critical stage inspections and issue the Occupation Certificate.
- glossary 10 May 2026Principal contractor A principal contractor is the PCBU with management or control of a construction workplace once project cost exceeds the jurisdictional threshold, usually $250,000.
- glossary 10 May 2026Products liability insurance Products liability covers builders for injury or property damage caused by completed work after handover. Usually bundled with public liability on annual policies.
- glossary 14 May 2026Professional indemnity insurance (PI) PI insurance covers losses from errors or omissions in professional advice or design. Required for design-and-construct work and consulting work.
- glossary 10 May 2026Profile board A profile board is a horizontal board on stakes positioned outside a building footprint, used to run string lines for footing widths, wall lines, and excavation depth dur
- glossary 10 May 2026Progress claim A progress claim is a written demand for payment of completed construction work, governed by Security of Payment Acts across Australia.
- glossary 10 May 2026Prohibition notice A prohibition notice is a WHS inspector direction to stop a specific activity immediately due to serious risk. Work cannot resume until the risk is controlled.
- glossary 10 June 2026Project trust account (QLD) A project trust account is a QLD BIF Act trust a head contractor holds progress money in for subcontractors, protecting payment down the chain.
- glossary 10 May 2026Property class (fasteners) Property class: the two-digit strength designation for metric fasteners (4.6, 8.8, 10.9). First digit x 100 = tensile strength MPa. AS 4291.1:2015.
- glossary 1 June 2026Propping Propping is temporary vertical support (acrow props, needles, strongbacks) carrying load while a wall is removed or an opening cut. It is engineered temporary works.
- glossary 14 May 2026Provisional Improvement Notice (PIN) A PIN is a Provisional Improvement Notice issued by an elected Health and Safety Representative under the WHS Act. Directs duty holders to address contraventions.
- glossary 2 May 2026PS allowance for work where scope isn't fully defined (e.g.
- glossary 23 May 2026Public notification period Public notification is the statutory window for DA submissions. 14-28 days typical. Submitter rights crystallise here; sets standing for third-party appeals.
- glossary 8 May 2026Puddle flange A puddle flange is the fitting at a shower or wet area floor waste that provides a waterproof connection between the membrane and the drain. NCC 2022 mandated.
- glossary 8 May 2026Purlin A purlin is a horizontal roof framing member spanning between rafters or portal frames to carry roofing. Common in steel-framed sheds and metal roof systems.
- glossaryQBCC QBCC (Queensland Building and Construction Commission) is the Queensland state regulator for building and construction licensing, compliance, and home warranty insurance.
- glossary 15 May 2026QC1 contract (HIA Queensland new homes) QC1 is the HIA Queensland standard contract for new home construction. Includes prime cost and provisional sums; aligns with QBCC Act Schedule 1B and home warranty.
- glossary 15 May 2026QC2 contract (HIA Queensland Peace of Mind) QC2 is HIA Queensland's Peace of Mind contract: no prime cost or provisional sum provisions, maximum cost certainty. Used when scope is fully resolved at signing.
- glossary 10 May 2026QCAT (Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal) QCAT resolves building and construction disputes in Queensland including subcontractor payment and defects claims. No monetary limit for domestic disputes.
- glossaryQHWS QHWS (Queensland Home Warranty Scheme) is Queensland's statutory home warranty insurance for residential building work over $3,300, administered by the QBCC.
- glossary 25 May 2026QLeave levy (Queensland) QLeave is the Queensland levy funding portable long service leave for construction workers. Payable on work over $150,000 ex-GST, before the development permit issues.
- glossary 15 May 2026Qualified Supervisor Certificate (NSW) QSC is the NSW individual credential to supervise residential building work without contracting. Companies must nominate a QSC holder to hold a corporate licence.
- glossary 9 May 2026Quantum meruit Quantum meruit is a legal claim for reasonable payment for work done outside or without a valid contract. Used when a variation was not signed or documented.
- glossary 16 May 2026Queensland Heritage Council Queensland Heritage Council administers the QLD Heritage Act 1992 and Heritage Register; assesses development apps on listed places, issues exemption certificates.
- glossary 9 May 2026R-Codes (Residential Design Codes WA) What the R-Codes are in WA: the statewide residential density and development standards that are automatically read into every local planning scheme.
- glossary 9 May 2026R-value R-value is the measure of a material's resistance to heat flow. Higher R = more insulation. Used across NCC 2022 climate zone tables for ceiling, walls, and floors.
- glossary 29 May 2026R30 (WA R-Code) R30 is a WA Residential Design Code: 30 dwellings per hectare, 350 m2 min lot for single dwellings, 0.5 plot ratio grouped. Standard suburban Perth code.
- glossary 28 May 2026R40 (WA R-Code) R40 is a Western Australian R-Code density of roughly 40 dwellings per hectare. Minimum lot, plot ratio, and where it sits in the R-Codes density ladder.
- glossary 23 May 2026RAB Act (NSW) NSW RAB Act 2020 gives the Building Commission stop work orders, rectification orders, and serious defect notices over Class 2-3-9c apartments.
- glossary 24 May 2026Racking Racking is the sideways distortion of a frame pushed out of square by wind or earthquake load. Bracing triangulates the frame to resist it, per AS 1684.
- glossary 14 May 2026Radiant heat (bushfire) Radiant heat (kW/m²) is the heat flux from a bushfire flame front used by AS 3959 to set BAL. Bands: 12.5, 19, 29, 40, FZ. Drives glazing and cladding spec.
- glossary 16 May 2026Rafter A rafter is the sloped structural member from ridge to eaves carrying roof load. Sized from AS 1684 by stress grade, span, wind class, load width. Different from a truss.
- glossary 10 May 2026Rain screen cavity A rain screen cavity is a drained, ventilated air gap between external cladding and the wall frame. Mandatory in Climate Zones 6, 7 and 8 under NCC 2025.
- glossary 4 May 2026Raking light Low-angle light parallel to a wall or ceiling, exposing joint bands and surface defects. Used to inspect Level 4 vs Level 5 plasterboard finish.
- glossary 24 May 2026Rateable remuneration Rateable remuneration is the wages and benefits base your workers-comp premium is charged on. Premium = rateable remuneration times your industry rate.
- glossary 5 May 2026RCD (Residual Current Device) RCDs (safety switches) detect earth-leakage current and trip the circuit. AS/NZS 3000 requires 30 mA RCDs on all final subcircuits in Australian homes.
- glossary 11 May 2026RCTI (Recipient Created Tax Invoice) An RCTI is a tax invoice issued by the buyer (builder) instead of the seller (subbie). Both parties must be GST-registered. Useful for milestone payments.
- glossary 30 May 2026Re-entrant corner A re-entrant corner is an inward (L-shaped) corner where stress concentrates and shrinkage cracks start; engineers call up diagonal trimmer bars across them.
- glossary 10 May 2026Reactive soil Reactive clay shrinks when dry and swells when wet, lifting or cracking slabs. AS 2870 site classes M, H1, H2, and E indicate increasing reactivity levels.
- glossary 30 May 2026Reasonable skill and care Reasonable skill and care is the professional standard a consultant is normally held to (competent conduct), lower than a fitness-for-purpose guarantee of the result.
- glossary 10 May 2026Reasonably practicable Reasonably practicable is the standard of care required by the WHS Act. Understand what it means in practice for Australian residential builders.
- glossary 5 May 2026REC (Registered Electrical Contractor, Victoria) A REC is a Victorian business licensed by Energy Safe Victoria to do electrical installation work for profit. Required to issue Certificates of Electrical Safety.
- glossary 1 June 2026Reclassification (NCC) Reclassification assigns a building a different NCC class because its use changed; a garage converted to living space becomes Class 1a and must meet its standards.
- glossary 16 May 2026Rectified porcelain tile Rectified porcelain tile is precision-cut after firing to exact dimensions and 90° edges. Allows 1.5-2 mm grout joints vs 3 mm minimum for non-rectified.
- glossary 14 May 2026Reduced level (RL) A reduced level (RL) is the height of a point relative to a benchmark (typically AHD or a TBM). FFL, ridge, soffit, and slab tops all read as RLs on drawings.
- glossary 10 May 2026Reference date The reference date is when a contractor can first serve a progress claim under Security of Payment Acts: the contract date or last day of each month if not specified.
- glossary 1 June 2026Referral agency A referral agency is a body (RFS, SARA, water authority) a DA must be referred to for input or concurrence; referrals add statutory time and cause most DA delays.
- glossary 3 June 2026Referral authority (VIC) A referral authority is a body (CFA, Melbourne Water, EPA, a utility) a Victorian planning permit must be referred to where an overlay or constraint triggers it.
- glossary 30 May 2026Reflective airspace A reflective airspace is the 20 mm air gap (AS/NZS 4200.2) a foil face needs to deliver R-value; pin it flat against a surface and it works only as a vapour barrier.
- glossary 16 May 2026Reflective insulation Reflective insulation is low-emittance foil. Only contributes to R-value if installed next to a still airspace 20-25 mm+. Without airspace it conducts and adds nothing.
- glossary 11 June 2026Regional plan (statutory planning) A statutory regional plan sits between state planning policy and local council schemes; it is binding on scheme amendments. QLD has 13, SA has 8.
- glossary 14 May 2026Registered Building Surveyor (VIC) A Registered Building Surveyor is Victoria's statutory certifier under the Building Act 1993. Issues building permits, inspections, and occupancy permits.
- glossary 1 June 2026Registered proprietor The registered proprietor is the owner of land recorded on the certificate of title, whose authority is needed to deal with the land or consent to approvals.
- glossary 16 May 2026Registrar-General (NSW) The Registrar-General is the NSW statutory officer responsible for the land titles register under the Real Property Act 1900. Title dealings registered via NSW LRS.
- glossary 11 June 2026Regulated design (NSW DBP Act) DBP Act NSW regulated design: the declared drawing for a building element (structure, fire, waterproofing) that must be lodged before Class 2/3/9c work starts.
- glossary 4 June 2026Reinforced concrete Reinforced concrete casts steel into concrete so the steel carries the tension the concrete cannot, the basis of footings, slabs, beams and walls under AS 3600.
- glossary 9 June 2026Reinforced masonry Reinforced masonry is masonry with steel bars in grouted cores or cavities to carry tension and bending, used for retaining walls and higher-load blockwork under AS 3700.
- glossary 4 June 2026Relevant authority (SA) The relevant authority is the body empowered to decide an SA planning or building application, the SA equivalent of a consent authority or assessment manager.
- glossary 26 May 2026Remediation Action Plan (RAP) A remediation action plan (RAP) sets out how a site's contamination is cleaned up to make it fit for use, with a validation report, before a CC or permit.
- glossary 11 May 2026Remittance advice A remittance advice tells a subbie which invoices have been paid and how much. Not a legal requirement but best practice for clean accounts on every project.
- glossary 10 May 2026Render Render is a cement-based coating applied to masonry or concrete walls to weatherproof and level the surface. Sand/cement, polymer-modified and acrylic types explained.
- glossary 16 May 2026Renderer (trade) Renderer is the trade applying cement render, acrylic render, and texture coats to masonry. Distinct from dry plasterer (plasterboard). Licensing varies by state.
- glossary 7 May 2026Reo (reinforcement) Reo is builder shorthand for steel reinforcement (mesh or bar) embedded in concrete to resist tensile forces. Placement, cover and grade are engineer-specified.
- glossary 25 May 2026Request for Further Information (DA assessment) A request for further information (RFI) is the council instrument in DA assessment that pauses the assessment clock until you respond. Not the same as a construction RFI.
- glossary 30 May 2026Residential exclusion (Security of Payment) The residential exclusion bars a head contractor from using a Security of Payment Act against an owner-occupier. It does not flow down, so subbies stay covered.
- glossary 14 May 2026Respirable crystalline silica (RCS) RCS is fine silica dust under 10 microns from cutting concrete, brick, fibre cement, stone. WES 0.05 mg/m³ over 8-hour TWA. WEL transition from 1 December 2026.
- glossary 3 June 2026Responsible authority (VIC) The responsible authority is the body (usually the council) that assesses and decides a Victorian planning permit, the VIC equivalent of a consent authority.
- glossary 11 June 2026Restricted development (SA Planning and Design Code) Restricted development is SA's fourth assessment category under PDI Act 2016: refusal the default, no right to assessment, gated by the State Planning Commission.
- glossary 1 June 2026Restricted licence A restricted licence is a building licence limited to a specialist scope (tiling, painting, fencing), not authorising structural or general residential building work.
- glossary 9 May 2026Restrictive covenant A restrictive covenant is a promise registered on title that limits how land can be used. Binds all future owners in NSW under the Conveyancing Act 1919.
- glossary 8 May 2026Retainage Retainage is the American term for retention money in building contracts. In Australia we say retention: a percentage withheld from progress payments as security.
- glossaryRetaining wall A retaining wall holds back soil or fill on a residential site. Required when batters exceed NCC 2022 limits. Design to AS 4678:2002 when over 800 mm high.
- glossary 2 May 2026Retention % of payment held back (typically 5%) until defects period passes.
- glossary 8 May 2026Retention bond A retention bond is an insurance-backed guarantee used in lieu of cash retention, letting contractors receive full payment while giving the principal contract security.
- glossary 15 May 2026Retention trust mechanism Retention trust mechanism explained: head contractor must hold subbie retention money in a dedicated trust account. NSW $20m, WA $20k, Qld project trusts.
- glossary 8 May 2026Retroactive date The retroactive date on a PI policy is the earliest work date covered. Claims for earlier work are excluded, even if lodged during the active policy period.
- glossary 24 May 2026ReturnToWorkSA ReturnToWorkSA runs SA's work-injury insurance scheme under the Return to Work Act 2014. Employers must insure workers and support their return to work.
- glossary 2 May 2026RFI formal question from builder to architect/client during tender or build.
- glossary 14 May 2026Ridge beam A ridge beam carries half the roof load down to posts at each end. Structural. Distinct from a non-structural ridge board. Used in cathedral ceilings.
- glossary 14 May 2026Ridge board A ridge board is the horizontal timber at the apex of a pitched roof. AS 1684 sizes it by rafter span and wind class. Replaced by truss apex in trusses.
- glossary 10 May 2026Ridge capping Ridge capping is the mortar-bedded or dry-fixed tile or metal cover that seals the apex of a pitched roof. A common defect source at PCI on tiled roofs.
- glossary 3 June 2026Rigging Rigging is the slings, shackles, chains and spreader gear connecting a load to a crane, and the licensed trade that selects, sets up and inspects it.
- glossary 14 May 2026Ring shank nail Ring shank nails have annular rings around the shaft that grip into the substrate. Required by AS 1684 for decking, sheet flooring, roof battens. Don't back out.
- glossary 16 May 2026Rise-and-fall clause (building contract) Rise-and-fall clause allows a fixed-price contract to adjust for material cost movements. Restricted in Vic on contracts under $500K. NSW: must be in writing.
- glossary 28 May 2026Riser height (stairs) Riser height is the vertical between stair treads, set under NCC Housing Provisions Part 11.2 at 115-190 mm residential, max 5 mm variation between risers.
- glossary 10 May 2026Rising damp Rising damp: moisture wicking upward from the ground into masonry walls. Prevented by a correctly installed damp-proof course (DPC) per NCC Housing Provisions 5.7.
- glossary 16 May 2026Risk assessment (WHS) Risk assessment is a written WHS exercise: identify hazards, evaluate likelihood and consequence, apply hierarchy of controls. Mandatory before HRCW, asbestos, CSE.
- glossary 29 May 2026RL818 (rectangular reinforcing mesh) RL818 is a rectangular welded wire mesh under AS/NZS 4671: heavier longitudinal than transverse wires. Used in suspended slabs where one-way bending applies.
- glossary 1 June 2026Roof strut A roof strut is a compression member transferring load from an underpurlin to a load-bearing wall or strutting beam in conventional roof framing, sized off AS 1684.
- glossary 26 May 2026Rough opening A rough opening is the framed hole sized to take a door or window plus packing. How it is set out and sized, and why square matters.
- glossary 2 May 2026Rough-in first-fix services (electrical, plumbing) before linings go on.
- glossary 10 May 2026RPE (Respiratory Protective Equipment) RPE covers all breathing protection on a building site: dust masks, half-face respirators, and SCBA for confined spaces. Know which type fits which hazard.
- glossary 10 May 2026RPEQ (Registered Professional Engineer of Queensland) RPEQ is mandatory registration for engineers in Queensland covering structural, civil, and other disciplines under the Professional Engineers Act 2002.
- glossary 30 May 2026RPL (Recognition of Prior Learning) Recognition of prior learning (RPL) is a VET assessment that awards a qualification for skills you already have, a route experienced trades use toward a builder licence.
- glossary 8 May 2026RTO (Registered Training Organisation) An RTO is a government-registered training body that delivers nationally recognised vocational qualifications including builder CPD and the white card.
- glossary 8 May 2026Run-off cover Run-off cover (extended reporting period) keeps PI insurance active for claims lodged after you retire or cancel your policy, for work done while it was current.
- glossary 7 May 2026Rw+Ctr Rw+Ctr is the single-number airborne sound rating required for NCC-compliant separating walls between Class 1 dwellings. The NCC minimum is 50.
- glossary 9 May 2026s7.11 contributions s7.11 contributions are levies councils charge on NSW development to fund local infrastructure. Formerly called s94 contributions. Rates set per council plan.
- glossary 8 May 2026safety glazing Safety glazing (Grade A safety glass) is toughened or laminated glass that breaks into blunt fragments. Required in doors, low-level windows, and bathrooms.
- glossary 10 May 2026Salt attack Salt attack: deterioration of masonry caused by soluble salts crystallising within pores, spalling the surface. Linked to rising damp and DPC failure in Australian homes.
- glossary 15 May 2026Sanitary compartment Sanitary compartment is the NCC's term for a separate WC enclosure. Triggers ventilation, drainage, livable-housing clear-opening, and grab-rail reinforcement rules.
- glossary 8 May 2026Sanitary drainage Sanitary drainage is the below-ground pipe system that carries waste from fixtures to the sewer. Governed by AS/NZS 3500 Part 2 on residential builds.
- glossary 9 May 2026Sanitaryware Sanitaryware is the collective term for bathroom and wet-area fixtures: basins, baths, toilets, bidets, and shower bases. Commonly supplied as PC items.
- glossary 16 May 2026Sapwood Sapwood is the outer layers of a log: lighter, lower density, Class 4 durability regardless of species. Must be excluded or treated for exposed and in-ground use.
- glossary 4 June 2026SARA (State Assessment and Referral Agency) SARA is the Queensland single point for state-interest referrals (state roads, heritage, vegetation, coastal) on a DA, adding a statutory referral stage.
- glossary 8 May 2026Sarking Sarking is a reflective or vapour-permeable membrane installed behind roof tiles or wall cladding to manage condensation, moisture, and draught. Required under NCC 2022.
- glossary 8 May 2026SAT (State Administrative Tribunal) The State Administrative Tribunal (SAT) is WA's independent body for building disputes, licensing decisions and disciplinary matters from the BSB.
- glossarySBSCH (Small Business Superannuation Clearing House) The SBSCH is the ATO's free clearing house for small business super payments. It closes on 1 July 2026 when Payday Super takes effect.
- glossary 10 May 2026Scaffold Scaffold: a temporary elevated work platform used in construction. Explained for Australian builders including HRCW triggers and HRW licence requirements.
- glossary 24 May 2026Schedule 1B (QBCC Act): Queensland domestic building contracts Schedule 1B of the QBCC Act governs Queensland domestic building contracts: level 1 and level 2 contracts, the Consumer Building Guide, and a 5-day cooling-off.
- glossary 5 May 2026Scope of works The scope of works is the written description of what a trade or builder will and will not do on a job. The single biggest predictor of a clean job.
- glossary 7 May 2026Score-and-snap Score-and-snap is the low-dust method for cutting fibre cement sheet and plasterboard on site. Score deeply with a carbide tool, snap over a straight edge.
- glossary 16 May 2026Scratch coat (cement render) Scratch coat is the first 5-8 mm cement render coat, mechanically scratched horizontally before set so the float coat keys to it. Cures 24-48 hours.
- glossary 6 May 2026Screed What a screed is, who lays it, the typical sand-cement mix, bonding additives, and why hollow tiles trace back to screed problems.
- glossary 2 May 2026Screen shower screen; framed/semi-frameless/frameless.
- glossary 10 May 2026Screw pile Screw pile (helical pile): a steel deep foundation rotated into reactive or poor soil without excavation. No spoil, immediate load bearing, used on Class H/E/P sites.
- glossary 10 May 2026Scupper A scupper is an opening through a parapet wall that allows water to overflow off a flat roof when primary drains are blocked. Required on all parapeted flat roofs.
- glossary 14 May 2026Seasoned timber Seasoned timber is dried to 15% moisture or below before delivery. Standard for pine framing; reduces shrinkage and frame distortion. AS 1684 separates seasoned tables.
- glossary 10 May 2026Second fix Second fix is the trade return after paint: hanging doors, fitting tapware, GPOs, skirting and architrave. It follows first fix (rough-in) and precedes PCI.
- glossary 14 May 2026Secondary dwelling / granny flat (NSW) Granny flat (secondary dwelling) in NSW: Housing SEPP 2021 allows them in R1-R5 zones on 450 m²+ lots, 60 m² max floor area, CDC fast-track available.
- glossary 8 May 2026Section 10.7 planning certificate What a Section 10.7 planning certificate is in NSW: the official overlay summary for a lot, including zone, heritage, bushfire, flood and acid sulfate flags.
- glossary 9 May 2026Section 32 Vendor Statement The Section 32 Vendor Statement is a pre-contract disclosure document required in Victoria before a buyer signs a contract of sale for real property.
- glossary 23 May 2026Section 4.55 modification (NSW) NSW EP&A Act s.4.55 lets developers modify an existing DA. Three classes: 4.55(1) minor error, 4.55(1A) minimal impact, 4.55(2) substantial. Common OC delay cause.
- glossary 5 May 2026Section 73 (Sydney Water Compliance Certificate) What a Section 73 Compliance Certificate is, when it's required, the cost and how to apply.
- glossary 9 May 2026Section 88B instrument A Section 88B instrument is the NSW legal document that creates or releases easements, restrictions, and positive covenants when a deposited plan is registered.
- glossary 16 May 2026Security screen (AS 5039) Security screen is a hinged or sliding screen over an external door, tested to AS 5039.1 for impact, anti-jemmy, knife shear and pull. Three-point lock typical.
- glossary 4 June 2026Sediment control Sediment control is the erosion measures (silt fence, shaker pad, stabilised entry, drain protection) required as a DA condition and under EPA rules on a building site.
- glossary 14 May 2026Self-closing door A self-closing door returns to closed and latched without assistance. Required at fire-rated openings under NCC HP 9.2.3 and at pool gates under AS 1926.
- glossary 29 May 2026Self-levelling screed Self-levelling screed is a fluid cement or gypsum topping that flows to level, used to correct slab tolerances before tile, timber, or vinyl flooring.
- glossary 29 May 2026Selleys Selleys is the Australian DuluxGroup brand for builder-grade sealants, adhesives, and fillers: No More Gaps, Liquid Nails, 401, Spakfilla. What each is for.
- glossary 1 June 2026Sensitive use A sensitive use (housing, childcare, schools, hospitals) is the high-exposure use that triggers contamination assessment and audit before a site can be used.
- glossary 7 May 2026Separating wall A separating wall divides two attached Class 1 dwellings and must meet NCC FRL requirements. Key rule: runs from footings to roof, not just ceiling height.
- glossary 7 May 2026SEPP (State Environmental Planning Policy) What a SEPP is in NSW planning: state-level planning instrument that can override local LEPs. Includes the Housing Code and CDC rules.
- glossary 15 May 2026SEPP vs LEP hierarchy (NSW planning instruments) NSW planning instrument hierarchy: SEPPs override LEPs, which override DCPs. EP&A Act s3.28: SEPP prevails on conflict. Why granny flats can land where the LEP says no.
- glossary 14 May 2026Service penetration A service penetration is a hole through a structural or fire-rated element for services. NCC HP 9.3 + 9.4 require fire collars or sealing to maintain the FRL.
- glossary 9 May 2026Servient tenement The servient tenement is the property that carries the burden of an easement. The owner cannot obstruct the easement rights held by the dominant tenement.
- glossary 24 May 2026Set-down (shower set-down) A shower set-down is the recess formed in a slab so the finished wet-area floor sits below the adjoining floor, containing water. The basis of a level-entry shower.
- glossary 14 May 2026Set-off Set-off is the right to deduct what you're owed from what you owe. State Security of Payment Acts limit it. NSW SOPA s 9(b) is the strongest example.
- glossary 14 May 2026Set-out Set-out is the activity that translates design dimensions onto the site: peg corners, set FFL, string footing lines. Errors are expensive and propagate fast.
- glossary 16 May 2026Setting blocks (glazing) Setting blocks are EPDM/synthetic rubber pads in the bottom of a glass frame supporting the glass weight. AS 1288:2021 specifies hardness, position (quarter-points).
- glossarySGC (Super Guarantee Charge) The Super Guarantee Charge (SGC) is an ATO penalty applied when an employer fails to pay the correct superannuation guarantee by the due date.
- glossaryShadowline Shadowline: a reveal or shadow gap at the wall-ceiling junction instead of a cornice moulding. Common in contemporary Australian residential builds.
- glossary 7 May 2026Sham contracting Sham contracting is when a worker is engaged as a contractor but legally qualifies as an employee. Illegal under the Fair Work Act; common in construction.
- glossary 10 May 2026Sheen Sheen is the level of gloss in a dried paint film. Residential finishes range from flat to low-sheen, semi-gloss, and gloss. Specifying sheen prevents PCI disputes.
- glossary 14 May 2026Sheet bracing Sheet bracing uses plywood or particleboard fixed to studs for wall racking resistance under AS 1684. Rated in BU/m. Compare with strap and angle bracing.
- glossary 24 May 2026Sheet membrane A sheet membrane is a factory-made waterproofing sheet bonded to the substrate, the alternative to a liquid-applied membrane. Consistent film, no curing wait.
- glossary 8 May 2026SHGC (Solar Heat Gain Coefficient) SHGC: the glazing spec that controls how much solar heat enters through windows. Key to NatHERS modelling and NCC 2022 7-star energy compliance.
- glossary 30 May 2026Shop drawings Shop drawings are detailed fabrication drawings a subbie prepares from the design (steel, cabinetry, trusses, glazing); preparing them can transfer design responsibility.
- glossary 30 May 2026Shoring Shoring is temporary support that stops soil, an excavation face, or a structure collapsing during excavation or demolition; trenches over 1.5 m make it HRCW.
- glossary 25 May 2026Shower rose The shower rose is the shower head fitting. Under AS 3740 it sets the shower-wall waterproofing height: 1800mm above floor or 50mm above the rose, whichever is higher.
- glossary 24 May 2026Shrink-swell Shrink-swell is the cyclic movement of reactive clay as it dries and wets. Measured as the shrink-swell index (Iss) per AS 1289, it drives the AS 2870 site class.
- glossary 8 May 2026SIC (Special Infrastructure Contribution) What an SIC is in NSW: a state-government levy on development in designated growth areas, disclosed on the Section 10.7 planning certificate. Affects project cost.
- glossary 1 June 2026Significant fabric (heritage) Significant fabric is the original material and detailing that carries a heritage place's significance, to be retained and repaired like-for-like, not replaced.
- glossary 29 May 2026Sika Sika is a Swiss construction-chemicals brand with strong Australian distribution. Sikaflex sealants, SikaTop repair mortars, AnchorFix anchors, Sikalastic membranes.
- glossary 25 May 2026Silica risk control plan (SRCP) A silica risk control plan must be prepared before high-risk crystalline silica processing under the 2024 WHS silica regulation. What it covers and who needs one.
- glossary 28 May 2026Silicone sealant Silicone sealant is a one-part curing sealant: neutral-cure for stone, masonry and waterproofing, acetoxy-cure (vinegar smell) for glass and glazing only.
- glossary 10 May 2026Silicosis Silicosis is an incurable lung disease from inhaling crystalline silica dust. The primary reason for Australia's engineered stone ban and site silica controls.
- glossary 16 May 2026Sill flashing Sill flashing is the self-adhesive tape or metal pan under the rough window sill that drains incidental water out before the window is fitted.
- glossary 23 May 2026Site area calculation Site area is the lot area used in FSR, plot ratio, site coverage, and density calculations. Battle-axe handles excluded; easements stay in; dedicated land out.
- glossary 10 May 2026Site classification Site class under AS 2870 runs from Class A (stable rock or sand) to Class P (problem site). The class drives footing design, slab type, and concrete specification.
- glossary 1 June 2026Site coverage Site coverage is the share of a lot covered by building footprint, a density control distinct from FSR. It caps how much ground you build on, regardless of height.
- glossary 4 June 2026Site establishment Site establishment is the initial set-up of a construction site: fencing, shed and amenities, sediment controls, signage, power and water, and locating services.
- glossary 29 May 2026Site rules (construction) Site rules are the principal contractor's posted safety rules: induction, PPE, exclusion zones, smoking/alcohol bans, reporting. Distinct from SWMS or site plan.
- glossary 10 May 2026Site-Specific Induction A site-specific induction covers the hazards, rules and emergency procedures unique to each construction project. Required before any worker starts on site.
- glossary 14 May 2026Skim coat (plasterboard) A skim coat is a full-surface thin coat of joint compound over taped plasterboard. Mandatory for AS 2589 Level 5; not part of standard Level 4. Adds a day per room.
- glossary 16 May 2026Skylight Skylight is glazed opening in roof admitting daylight. Counts as overhead glazing under AS 1288:2021. Must use laminated safety glass; common flashing failure point.
- glossary 29 May 2026SL72 mesh SL72 is a welded square reinforcement mesh used in the top of residential slabs. The standard for waffle pod toppings and stiffened rafts on most domestic builds.
- glossary 26 May 2026Slab heave Slab heave is the upward movement of a slab-on-ground when reactive clay swells with moisture, lifting it unevenly and cracking walls and floors.
- glossary 2 May 2026Slab on ground concrete slab poured directly on prepared ground.
- glossary 11 May 2026Sleeve anchor A torque-controlled expansion anchor for concrete and masonry. DynaBolt Plus is the common Australian example. Medium duty: bottom plates, handrails, brackets.
- glossary 10 May 2026Slip joint Slip joint: a membrane layer at horizontal junctions between masonry and dissimilar materials, allowing differential movement and preventing moisture transfer.
- glossary 7 May 2026Slip resistance Slip resistance is the measure of grip on a walking surface. NCC 2022 requires P3/R10 dry and P4/R11 wet for stair treads. Wrong slip rating is a common PCI fail.
- glossary 16 May 2026SLS (serviceability limit state) SLS is the engineering check against excessive deflection, vibration, and cracking under normal loads. Members must feel solid and not visibly sag. Pairs with ULS.
- glossary 16 May 2026Slump (concrete workability test) Slump is the workability measure of fresh concrete: filled into a cone, cone lifted, vertical drop measured. Residential slab pours typically 80-100 mm slump.
- glossary 16 May 2026Small works contract (residential) Small works contract is the short-form residential building contract used between $5,000 and $20,000 in NSW. Different deposit and disclosure than large works.
- glossary 10 May 2026Smooth-edge (gripper rod) Smooth-edge (gripper rod) is the perimeter fixing system used in residential carpet installation. Carpet hooks onto the strip and is power-stretched flat.
- glossary 4 May 2026Snag list (UK) Snag list is the UK term. In Australia, builders call it a defects list, the running list of items raised at PCI for the builder to rectify before final.
- glossary 7 May 2026Snots Snots: mortar droppings that fall into the brick veneer cavity during laying. A common defect that blocks weep holes and bridges the DPC, causing moisture issues.
- glossary 1 June 2026Snug-tight Snug-tight is the AS 4100 bolting category where bolts are tightened just to bring plies into firm contact, not fully tensioned like a friction-grip connection.
- glossary 7 May 2026SoEE (Statement of Environmental Effects) What a Statement of Environmental Effects is, when it's required for a NSW DA, what it must cover, and who prepares it under the EP&A Act 1979.
- glossary 14 May 2026Soffit The soffit is the horizontal underside of the eaves between fascia and wall. Usually lined with fibre cement (HardieFlex) or timber. Provides roof ventilation.
- glossary 30 May 2026Soft-close hardware Soft-close hardware is the dampened hinges and drawer runners that pull a cabinet door or drawer shut gently over the last few centimetres, standard on modern joinery.
- glossary 2 May 2026Soil report classifies site soil per AS 2870 (A, S, M, H1, H2, E, P).
- glossary 6 May 2026Soil report (geotech) What a soil report covers, the site classification categories (A, S, M, H1, H2, E, P) under AS 2870, and how it drives slab and footing design.
- glossary 11 June 2026Solar reflectance index (SRI) SRI combines solar reflectance and thermal emittance into one cool-roof score. Understand how SRI differs from the NCC's solar absorptance limit.
- glossary 25 May 2026Sole-occupancy unit (SOU) A sole-occupancy unit (SOU) is an NCC term for a part of a building under one occupier's exclusive use. It is the boundary fire and sound separation applies between.
- glossary 10 May 2026Solid core door A solid core door has a dense engineered or timber infill, making it the standard for all external door openings in Australian residential construction.
- glossary 16 May 2026SOPA (Security of Payment Act) SOPA is the family of state Security of Payment Acts: fast-track adjudication for unpaid construction progress claims. NSW 1999; QLD BIF; VIC 2002; WA 2004.
- glossary 8 May 2026Spalling Spalling is the breaking away or flaking of concrete from the surface, typically caused by corroding reinforcement, freeze-thaw cycles, or insufficient cover.
- glossary 8 May 2026Span tables Span tables are published supplements to AS 1684 that specify the minimum timber size for each framing member based on span, load, spacing, stress grade, and wind class.
- glossary 29 May 2026Spatial Viewer (NSW Planning Portal) The NSW Spatial Viewer is the Planning Portal's mapping tool: zoning, FSR, height, heritage, BAL, flood, coastal overlays. The first lookup on any NSW residential lot.
- glossary 30 May 2026Special-class concrete Special-class (S grade) concrete is specified beyond the AS 1379 normal-class N grades, for exposure, high-early or low-shrinkage mixes, and needs a written spec.
- glossary 15 May 2026Specification 42 (NCC 2022) Specification 42 of NCC 2022 Volume Two is the NatHERS compliance pathway: 7-star minimum thermal rating plus a Whole-of-Home energy budget ≥ 60.
- glossary 26 May 2026Splashback A splashback is the wipeable wall surface behind a kitchen bench or cooktop. Tile vs glass, the right substrate, and the gas cooktop clearance rule.
- glossary 15 May 2026Spoil (earthworks) Spoil is excavated material that must be removed, stockpiled, or reused. Classification, contamination tests, and disposal compliance drive cost on a build.
- glossarySquare-set Square-set: a plasterboard ceiling finish where wall and ceiling sheets meet at a crisp 90-degree angle with no cornice moulding. Modern alternative to cove cornice.
- glossary 1 June 2026Stack bond Stack bond is a masonry pattern where units sit directly on each other with aligned vertical joints; it is weaker than stretcher bond and has specific AS 3700 rules.
- glossary 14 May 2026Stage payment A stage payment is a fixed-percentage payment due at a residential construction milestone. NSW caps deposits at 10%; Vic DBCA s 40 sets statutory stage caps.
- glossary 1 June 2026Stair flight A stair flight is a continuous run of steps between floors or landings, capped by the NCC at 18 risers (minimum 2); riser and going uniformity rules apply across it.
- glossary 28 May 2026Stair geometry Stair geometry is the NCC residential dimensional set: riser 115-190 mm, going 240-355 mm, 2R+G 550-700 mm, max 5 mm variation, max 18 risers per flight.
- glossary 28 May 2026Standard Instrument LEP (NSW) The Standard Instrument is the NSW order councils must use as the template for their LEPs. Standard zones, standard clauses, and the clause 4.6 variation path.
- glossary 16 May 2026Standby person (confined space) A standby person sits outside a confined space for the full entry, holds continuous communication with entrants, and must never enter to attempt rescue.
- glossary 14 May 2026Standing seam (metal roofing) A standing seam roof uses upstanding folded seams between sheets and concealed fasteners. Permits pitches down to 1 degree. Cleaner look, higher cost than corrugated.
- glossary 14 May 2026Stapled super fund A stapled super fund is an employee's existing default fund that follows them to a new employer. Employers must request stapled details from the ATO if no nomination.
- glossary 3 June 2026Starter bars Starter bars are reinforcing bars left projecting from a footing or slab to lap into the column, wall or slab cast above, giving structural continuity between pours.
- glossary 16 May 2026State Heritage Register State Heritage Registers are statutory lists of state-significant places under each state's Heritage Act. Listed places need state heritage approval before any DA.
- glossary 11 June 2026State Planning Commission (SA) SA's independent statutory planning body under the PDI Act. Maintains the Planning and Design Code, prepares regional plans, assesses restricted development.
- glossary 23 May 2026State-significant development (SSD, NSW) SSD is the NSW DA category for development of state significance. Assessed by the Minister via DPHI, not council. Above designated; EIS required.
- glossary 25 May 2026Statutory debt (Security of Payment) Under Security of Payment laws, an unpaid claim becomes a statutory debt in court if no payment schedule is served in time, and the respondent can't raise a defence.
- glossary 16 May 2026Statutory demand (Corporations Act) A statutory demand under Corporations Act s.459E forces a company to pay a debt over $4,000 within 21 days. Non-compliance creates a presumption of insolvency.
- glossary 15 May 2026Statutory endorsement (SOPA payment claim) A SOPA payment claim must carry a statutory endorsement (NSW s.13(9)). Missing the magic words invalidates the claim and kills the adjudication pathway.
- glossary 16 May 2026Statutory trust account (construction) Statutory trust account: a regulator-monitored bank account holding subcontractor retention or progress payments under NSW, WA and Qld SOP Acts. Strict obligations.
- glossary 8 May 2026Statutory warranty A statutory warranty is implied by law into NSW residential building contracts under the Home Building Act 1989, covering workmanship, materials, and fitness.
- glossary 16 May 2026Step flashing (roof-to-wall) Step flashing is the series of overlapping L-flashings stepped up the wall where a sloped roof meets it. NCC 7.3 sets 75 mm upturn and 75 mm lap.
- glossary 4 June 2026Step-free entry A step-free entry is a path and threshold into a dwelling with no step, required under NCC Livable Housing, driving slab set-down, paving falls and threshold detailing.
- glossary 30 May 2026Step-free path (NCC H8 livable housing) A step-free path is the continuous level route from boundary or parking to the front door, required for new Class 1a homes under NCC 2022 Part H8 in adopting states.
- glossary 7 May 2026Stiffened raft slab A stiffened raft slab is the most common residential slab type in Australia: a flat concrete panel with deepened edge and internal beams designed under AS 2870.
- glossary 10 May 2026Stirrup A stirrup is a closed-loop or U-shaped steel bar fitted around beam longitudinal bars to resist shear forces. Spacing is engineer-specified per AS 3600:2018.
- glossary 23 May 2026Stop work order Stop work order shuts a site immediately under NSW, Vic, Qld, WA building enforcement law. Tools down. Costs $330k+ per breach. Appeal window typically 28-30 days.
- glossary 2 May 2026Stormwater discharge where roof and surface water legally must connect (council-controlled).
- glossarySTP (Single Touch Payroll) Single Touch Payroll (STP) Phase 2 requires Australian employers to report payroll data to the ATO on or before each payday. Mandatory since January 2022.
- glossary 1 June 2026Streetscape The streetscape is a street's collective visual character (forms, setbacks, materials, planting) that heritage and character controls protect from out-of-pattern change.
- glossary 8 May 2026Stress grade A stress grade is a structural classification for timber indicating its bending, tension, and stiffness capacity. Used to read AS 1684 span tables correctly.
- glossary 1 June 2026Stringer (stairs) A stringer is the inclined structural member up each side or centre of a stair that treads and risers fix to; marking it out in one pass keeps risers uniform.
- glossary 15 May 2026Strip footing Strip footing is a continuous reinforced concrete beam below loadbearing walls. Used on Class A/S/M sites under AS 2870, masonry or brick veneer construction.
- glossary 1 June 2026Structural adequacy (FRL) Structural adequacy is the first FRL criterion: the minutes a load-bearing element keeps carrying load in a fire test. A dash means it is non-load-bearing.
- glossary 4 June 2026Structural certification Structural certification is the inspection and certification a structural engineer issues confirming as-built footings, slab and frame match the engineered design.
- glossary 30 May 2026Structural deck flooring Structural deck flooring is the floor sheeting (particleboard, plywood, or compressed sheet) glued and screwed over joists to form the rigid platform in platform framing.
- glossaryStructural landscaping Structural landscaping is external landscape work involving constructed features like retaining walls, paving, decks, and pergolas. Licensing required in most states.
- glossary 2 June 2026Strutting beam A strutting beam is a designed beam that picks up roof strut loads where there's no load-bearing wall below to carry them down, sized to AS 1684 or by an engineer.
- glossary 2 May 2026Stumped older houses on timber or concrete stumps; common in VIC/QLD.
- glossary 30 May 2026Subcontract A subcontract is the contract between the head contractor and a subcontractor for part of the works; terms flow down from the head contract, with SoP rights protected.
- glossary 16 May 2026Subfloor ventilation Subfloor ventilation: required aggregate vent opening per metre of perimeter. NCC 2022 Part 6.2; varies by climate zone. Stops rot and termite damage.
- glossary 14 May 2026Subgrade Subgrade is the natural or compacted ground surface beneath fill, slab, or pavement. Distinct from sub-base. AS 3798 compaction governs slabs and driveways.
- glossary 8 May 2026Substrate Substrate is the base material onto which a finish (tile, paint, membrane, render) is applied. In wet areas, the substrate condition governs membrane performance.
- glossary 29 May 2026Subterranean termites Subterranean termites are soil-dwelling species causing most structural termite damage in Australia. Target of AS 3660; distinct from drywood termites.
- glossary 24 May 2026Sum insured (construction) The sum insured is the maximum a contract works insurer will pay. Set it to the full reinstatement value or an average clause can cut a partial-loss payout.
- glossary 1 June 2026Sump (roof drainage) A roof sump is a recessed collection point in a flat roof or box gutter that gathers water to the outlet and downpipe, with the membrane clamped into it to stop leaks.
- glossary 14 May 2026Supply authority (electrical) An electrical supply authority is the distribution network owner-operator on the supply side of the meter. State-by-state DNSP list and connection process for builders.
- glossary 30 May 2026Supply-and-install Supply-and-install is when a trade both supplies a product and fixes it on site, unlike supply-only or labour-only; the model drives licensing exposure and scope.
- glossary 15 May 2026Supporting statement Written declaration head contractors must attach to a payment claim on the principal under NSW SOP Act s13(7), confirming all subbies are paid in full to date.
- glossary 14 May 2026Supporting statement (NSW SOPA) Supporting statement under NSW SOPA s 13(7): head contractor's declaration that all subbies have been paid. False statement: 200/1,000 penalty units plus jail.
- glossary 30 May 2026Surcharge (retaining walls) A surcharge is extra load on the soil a retaining wall holds back (driveway, vehicle, fill); it raises the wall's demand and triggers an AS 4678 engineered design.
- glossary 4 June 2026Surface preparation Surface preparation is cleaning, repairing and profiling a substrate so a coating, paint or adhesive bonds to it. It is the step that decides whether a finish lasts.
- glossary 30 May 2026Survey datum A survey datum is the zero-reference level a site's heights (RLs) are measured from, either AHD or an assumed site datum. Get it wrong and every finished level is wrong.
- glossary 1 June 2026Suspended slab A suspended slab is a concrete slab spanning between beams, walls or columns rather than bearing on the ground, engineered to AS 3600 rather than the on-ground AS 2870.
- glossary 14 May 2026Switchboard A domestic switchboard houses the main switch, RCDs, MCBs, surge protection, and circuit labels. Renewal triggers AS/NZS 3000 upgrade work. Builder primer.
- glossary 2 May 2026SWMS required for high-risk construction work under WHS regs.
- glossary 29 May 2026Synthetic pyrethroid Synthetic pyrethroids are lab-made analogues of natural pyrethrin: bifenthrin, deltamethrin. Repellent termiticide actives, contrast with non-repellent fipronil.
- glossary 25 May 2026Tanking Tanking is applying a continuous waterproof membrane to fully enclose a structure and hold back water under pressure, classically below-ground basements and lift pits.
- glossary 16 May 2026Tap test (tile debonding) Tap test is the PCI check for tile debonding: tap each tile with a coin or tester. Solid clear tone = good bond; dull or hollow tone = delamination from the adhesive.
- glossary 14 May 2026Tape coat (plasterboard) The tape coat is the first of three plastering passes on plasterboard joints. Thin compound, tape pressed in, excess knifed off. Followed by fill and finish.
- glossary 9 May 2026Tapware Tapware covers all tap fittings in a residential build: basin mixers, kitchen taps, shower mixers, bath fillers. A classic prime cost (PC) item in building contracts.
- glossary 23 May 2026Tasmanian Planning Scheme (TPS) The TPS is Tasmania's single statewide planning instrument under LUPAA 1993, effective 26 June 2024. Combines State Planning Provisions + Local Provisions Schedules.
- glossary 23 May 2026Tax account (builder cashflow discipline) Tax account is the operational discipline of a separate bank account swept with GST and PAYG on every stage payment. Prevents builder's biggest cashflow failure.
- glossary 10 May 2026Tax invoice A tax invoice is the document a GST-registered business must issue for sales over $82.50 (GST-inclusive). Required fields include ABN, date, and GST amount.
- glossary 10 May 2026Tek screw Tek screw: self-drilling screw for metal-to-metal or metal-to-timber fixing. Drill, tap, and fasten in one pass. AS 3566. Common in roofing, cladding, LGS.
- glossary 8 May 2026Tempering valve A tempering valve blends hot and cold water to limit the outlet temperature to 50°C at sanitary fixtures. Required under AS/NZS 3500.4 on residential builds.
- glossary 10 May 2026Temporary benchmark (TBM) A temporary benchmark (TBM) is a fixed reference point with a known elevation used to control all height measurements on a construction site throughout the build.
- glossary 10 June 2026Tender (construction) A tender is the formal priced offer a builder submits against a documented scope, the step between estimate and contract that becomes a binding price.
- glossary 1 June 2026Termination bar A termination bar is a metal bar fixed with sealant to clamp the top edge of a waterproofing membrane at an upstand, the mechanical termination AS 4654.2 requires.
- glossary 29 May 2026Termination of a building contract Termination of a building contract is the lawful ending before practical completion: mutual agreement, contract right (default, insolvency), or accepting repudiation.
- glossary 14 May 2026Termite barrier A termite barrier protects Class 1 and Class 10 builds from termite ingress. AS 3660.1:2014 categories, durable notice rule, and 50-year design life explained.
- glossary 25 May 2026Termite inspection zone The termite inspection zone is the minimum 75mm of exposed slab edge AS 3660.1 requires so termite mud tubes bridging the barrier stay visible. Banking over it voids it.
- glossary 29 May 2026Termite mud tube A termite mud tube is the earthen shelter tube subterranean termites build to cross an exposed surface. Compliant barriers force the tube into the open.
- glossary 29 May 2026Termite reticulation system A termite reticulation system is perforated pipes under the slab perimeter, letting termiticide be re-injected from outside when chemical life expires. No trenching.
- glossary 29 May 2026Termiticide A termiticide is the chemical active behind a termite barrier. The repellent vs non-repellent split and the three actives a builder meets on residential work.
- glossary 8 May 2026Terrain category Terrain category (TC1 to TC3) describes ground surface roughness within 500 m of a building site, used in AS 4055 and AS/NZS 1170.2 to determine the site wind class.
- glossary 23 May 2026Territory Plan (ACT) ACT Territory Plan is the single statutory planning instrument under Planning Act 2023. Effective 27 September 2024. Covers all of ACT; no LGAs exist.
- glossary 24 May 2026Test pit A test pit is a shallow excavated hole that exposes the soil profile for the geotech to log and sample, feeding the soil report and AS 2870 site classification.
- glossary 30 May 2026Tested system A tested system is an assembly (board, framing, fixings, insulation) tested together for a fire, acoustic, or structural rating. Swap a part and the rating is void.
- glossary 25 May 2026TFN declaration A TFN declaration is the ATO form a new employee completes so you withhold the right PAYG tax. No TFN within 28 days means withholding at 47%. What builders need.
- glossary 10 May 2026Thermal break A thermal break is a low-conductivity layer that interrupts heat flow through a building frame. Required at all steel-to-cladding contact points under NCC 2022.
- glossary 24 May 2026Thermal bridging Thermal bridging is heat flowing through a more conductive building element, bypassing insulation. NCC 2022 H6D2 requires R0.2 thermal breaks on steel framing.
- glossary 26 May 2026Thermal expansion Thermal expansion is the size change of a material with temperature. Why a steel roof moves about 6 mm over 10 m, and where expansion joints go.
- glossary 1 June 2026Thermal performance Thermal performance is how well a building's fabric resists heat flow with minimal heating and cooling, the property a NatHERS star rating measures.
- glossary 16 May 2026Thermally broken aluminium (window frame) Thermally broken aluminium is an aluminium window frame split by a polyamide thermal break, eliminating the cold bridge. Required to deliver IGU performance in zones 6-8.
- glossary 23 May 2026Third-party appeal rights (planning) Third-party appeal rights let objectors challenge a planning decision. Available for designated (NSW), impact-assessable (Qld), discretionary pathways.
- glossary 16 May 2026Threshold (doorway) Threshold is the horizontal element at a doorway's base. NCC H8 caps the livable-housing entrance to 5 mm rounded, or a ramped threshold up to 56 mm at 1:8 max.
- glossary 10 May 2026Tie wire Tie wire is annealed steel wire used by steel fixers to secure reinforcing bar intersections before a concrete pour. Tails must be tucked away from the cover face.
- glossary 2 May 2026Tie-down connection from roof to foundation resisting wind uplift.
- glossary 29 May 2026Tile adhesive Tile adhesive is graded under AS ISO 13007 by class (C1, C2) plus suffix codes (T, E, F, S1, S2). Wet areas need C2S1; large-format tiles need C2 plus the right trowel.
- glossary 29 May 2026Tile bedding Tile bedding is the mortar or adhesive layer under a tile. When to use thin-bed adhesive vs thick-bed mortar, and how it differs from the screed below.
- glossary 8 May 2026Tiler A tiler is a trade contractor who fixes ceramic, stone, and similar tiles to floors and walls. In wet areas, tilers work after the waterproofer signs off.
- glossary 3 June 2026Timber appearance grade Appearance grade is the visual grading of structural timber (industrial, select, feature) that decides whether a beam is fit to be exposed, driving feature-beam cost.
- glossary 10 May 2026Timber joint group Timber joint group (JD1 to JD6) classifies timber species by density and fastener-holding capacity under AS 1720.1. Governs screw, bolt, and nail capacity.
- glossary 30 May 2026Timber notching Timber notching is cutting or drilling a framing member for services; AS 1684.2 Section 7 limits how much and where, or the member drops below its span-table capacity.
- glossary 7 May 2026Time at large Time at large occurs when the contractual completion date becomes unenforceable. The builder must only finish in a reasonable time, and liquidated damages cannot apply.
- glossary 16 May 2026Title search Title search pulls the Certificate of Title and its dealings (Section 88B, encumbrances, caveats) for a property. Order before concept design to catch deal-killers.
- glossary 5 May 2026TMV (Thermostatic Mixing Valve) and tempering valve What a TMV and tempering valve do, the 50 degree rule, where each is required in residential.
- glossary 11 June 2026TNV (Technical and Numeric Variation) SA Planning and Design Code A TNV is a spatially mapped numeric variation in SA's Planning and Design Code, overriding zone defaults for setbacks, heights, or frontage lot by lot.
- glossary 2 May 2026Tolerance A tolerance is the allowable deviation from a stated dimension or finish. It defines the line between acceptable workmanship and a defect at PCI.
- glossary 15 May 2026Toolbox talk A toolbox talk is a short (10-15 min) on-site WHS briefing covering a current hazard, recent incident, new task, or seasonal risk. Documents WHS consultation.
- glossary 1 June 2026Top chord (truss) The top chord is the upper continuous member of a truss, in compression under gravity load and following the roof pitch, connected to the bottom chord by web members.
- glossary 24 May 2026Top plate The top plate caps the studs and carries the load above. Single vs double (ribbon) top plate, why it ties walls together, and its role in the tie-down chain.
- glossary 30 May 2026Topographic multiplier The topographic multiplier is the AS 4055 factor for wind speeding up over hills, ridges and escarpments; it can push a site's wind classification and bracing demand up.
- glossary 11 June 2026Topping slab Topping slab: in-situ concrete over hollowcore planks or existing slabs. Bonded creates composite action; unbonded acts independently. Not a screed.
- glossary 30 May 2026Torque-controlled anchor A torque-controlled anchor (sleeve or wedge) grips as the nut is tightened to a set torque, expanding against the hole wall; distinct from chemical and screw anchors.
- glossary 11 June 2026Torrens title Torrens title is the Australian land system where the register is conclusive (indefeasible): what registration means, its exceptions, and why it matters on site.
- glossary 8 May 2026toughened glass Toughened (tempered) glass is heat-treated to break into small blunt fragments. Required as Grade A safety glazing in doors, bathrooms and low windows under AS 1288.
- glossary 11 May 2026TPAR (Taxable Payments Annual Report) The TPAR is an annual ATO report builders must lodge by 28 August listing every contractor payment made during the year. Threshold: 50% of income from building work.
- glossaryTPO (tree preservation order) A TPO (tree preservation order) protects significant trees on a property. Removing or lopping a protected tree without council approval can result in significant fines.
- glossary 2 May 2026TPZ protected radius around significant trees per AS 4970-2009.
- glossary 14 May 2026Tracking categories (Xero) Tracking categories are Xero's free way to label transactions by job, region, or cost code. Capped at 2 active categories with 100 options each. Lightweight job costing.
- glossary 9 June 2026Trade certificate A trade certificate is the recognised qualification (Certificate III, or Cert IV / Diploma for builders) that underpins eligibility for a trade or building licence.
- glossary 2 May 2026Traffic management plan required where construction affects public access; council permits often needed.
- glossary 10 May 2026Trafficable Trafficable describes a surface or membrane designed to withstand foot traffic. Used for balconies, roof decks, and podiums requiring durable waterproofing systems.
- glossary 10 May 2026Training contract A training contract is the formal agreement between an employer and an apprentice that registers the apprenticeship with the state training authority.
- glossary 29 May 2026Transfer effect (termite) Termite transfer effect: contact, grooming and trophallaxis carry a non-repellent termiticide back to the colony, killing termites that never touched it.
- glossary 26 May 2026Trapezoidal roof profile A trapezoidal roof profile has flat-topped, steep-sided ribs (Trimdek, Klip-Lok). Why it runs lower pitch than corrugated, and how the types differ.
- glossary 29 May 2026Treated-sheet termite barrier A treated-sheet termite barrier (Kordon, HomeGuard) is a physical sheet plus an embedded chemical active assessed under AS 3660.3 for termite resistance.
- glossary 14 May 2026Tree influence zone The tree influence zone is 1 to 1.5x mature tree height around a tree. Roots inside this zone can shift differential ground movement under footings. AS 2870 Appendix C.
- glossary 8 May 2026Trench mesh Trench mesh is prefabricated steel reinforcing mesh cut to fit strip footings and trench beams. Available in 200, 300 and 400 mm widths per AS/NZS 4671:2019.
- glossary 26 May 2026Tributary area Tributary area is the plan area of floor or roof whose load one post, beam or footing carries. How to work it out, and why it drives member and footing sizing.
- glossary 16 May 2026Trigger event (home warranty) Trigger event activates HBCF (NSW) or DBI (Vic) claim: builder insolvency, death, disappearance, licence suspension. Solvent builder, no claim.
- glossary 16 May 2026Trimdek roofing profile Trimdek is Lysaght's 29 mm low-rib pierce-fix steel roofing profile: 762 mm cover, 2 degree minimum pitch. The contemporary default for new AU metal roofs.
- glossary 25 May 2026Trimmer stud A trimmer stud is the shortened stud that supports each end of a lintel over a door or window, carrying the lintel load down to the bottom plate. How it is sized.
- glossary 16 May 2026Truss layout drawing The plan drawing from the truss manufacturer showing each truss position, type, spacing, and bearing. The chippy's reference for installation under AS 4440.
- glossaryTurf Turf is pre-grown grass supplied in rolls or slabs and laid by a landscaper. Common species include Sir Walter buffalo, couch, and kikuyu.
- glossary 29 May 2026TWA (Time-Weighted Average) TWA is the standard averaging period for workplace airborne exposure. Most WHS limits are set as 8-hour TWA: how it works and why it matters on construction.
- glossary 10 May 2026Type 17 screw Type 17 screw: augur-point timber fixing screw with a self-starting thread that cuts into timber without pre-drilling. Standard for framing and decking.
- glossary 25 May 2026Tyvek HomeWrap: the vapour-permeable wall wrap Tyvek HomeWrap is DuPont's spunbonded vapour-permeable wall wrap, AS/NZS 4200 Class 4 and non-reflective. A premium secondary weather barrier for cool-climate builds.
- glossary 16 May 2026U-value (thermal transmittance) U-value is heat transfer rate (W/m²·K) through a building element, lower is better. Used for windows in NatHERS modelling. Typically 2-6 for windows, 0.3-0.5 walls.
- glossary 16 May 2026ULS (ultimate limit state) ULS is the design check against structural failure (collapse, fracture, instability) under AS/NZS 1170. Engineers size members to resist factored loads at ULS.
- glossary 14 May 2026Uncontrolled fill Uncontrolled fill is fill placed without AS 3798 supervision. Under AS 2870 it forces the site to Class P and a fully engineered slab. Common on brownfield sites.
- glossary 1 June 2026Under-slab insulation Under-slab insulation is high-density rigid foam (EPS or XPS) laid below a concrete slab in cool climates to cut heat loss to the ground; low-density foam crushes.
- glossary 14 May 2026Underpinning Underpinning extends existing footings deeper or wider to support added load or remedy settlement. AS 2870 pathway, engineer-designed, specialist work.
- glossary 14 May 2026Underpurlin An underpurlin is a horizontal timber beam under the rafters at mid-span, transferring load to a strutting beam or wall. Sized under AS 1684 span tables.
- glossary 15 May 2026Universal beam (UB) Universal beam (UB) is the deep-web hot-rolled I-section that does the heavy lifting in residential: lintels, ridge beams, garage headers. AS/NZS 3679.1, Grade 300.
- glossary 10 May 2026Upstand An upstand is the vertical section of membrane or flashing at a flat roof edge, parapet, or abutment that prevents water tracking behind the waterproofing system.
- glossary 14 May 2026Valley gutter A valley gutter runs down the intersection of two roof planes, collecting water from both. Pre-formed metal. Maintenance and detail explained for builders.
- glossary 14 May 2026Vapour barrier (slab) A vapour barrier is a continuous polyethylene sheet over sub-slab fill before reo and concrete. Blocks moisture into the slab. AS 2870 sets 200 μm minimum thickness.
- glossary 30 May 2026Vapour control layer (VCL) A vapour control layer (VCL) is a low-permeance layer on the warm side of a wall that slows moisture entering the cavity, paired with a cold-side permeable membrane.
- glossary 1 June 2026Vapour impermeable Vapour impermeable describes a material vapour cannot diffuse through, useful as a vapour barrier on the warm side but a condensation risk where a wall needs to dry.
- glossary 16 May 2026Vapour permeance (AS 4200.1 classes) Vapour permeance is the rate water vapour passes a material. AS 4200.1 Class 1 (barrier) to Class 4 (permeable). NCC requires Class 3-4 in wall sarking.
- glossary 25 May 2026Vapour-permeable membrane A vapour-permeable membrane is a wall or roof wrap that lets the cavity dry outward, used in cooler NCC climate zones to manage condensation. High AS/NZS 4200 permeance.
- glossary 2 May 2026Variation change to scope after contract signing.
- glossary 8 May 2026VBA (Victorian Building Authority) The VBA (Victorian Building Authority) is the statutory regulator for building, plumbing, and occupational licensing in Victoria under the Building Act 1993.
- glossary 10 May 2026VCAT (Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal) VCAT resolves building and construction disputes in Victoria with no monetary limit. Subcontractors can apply directly against builders for payment or defects claims.
- glossary 14 May 2026Vegetation clearing (NSW) Vegetation clearing in non-rural NSW is governed by Biodiversity and Conservation SEPP 2021 Chapter 2. Above the BOS threshold needs a BDAR. Council DCP rules apply.
- glossary 1 June 2026Vegetation management (bushfire) Bushfire vegetation management is the ongoing clearing and pruning of the defendable space (APZ) a bushfire plan requires for the life of the building, not a one-off.
- glossary 23 May 2026VicSmart (Victoria) VicSmart is Victoria's streamlined planning permit for low-risk work. 10-business-day turnaround, no public notice, council officer decides.
- glossary 16 May 2026Viewing distance (workmanship) Viewing distance for assessing residential workmanship defects is 6.1 m in diffused light. Defects invisible at this distance are typically not workmanship defects.
- glossary 9 May 2026Villaboard Villaboard is James Hardie's fibre cement lining for wet areas: bathrooms, showers, laundries, splashbacks. 6 mm and 9 mm. Needs AS 3740 membrane before tiling.
- glossary 10 May 2026VJ board VJ board (vee-joint) is a tongue-and-groove timber lining profile used for feature walls and ceilings in Australian residential builds. Decorative finish only.
- glossary 14 May 2026VMIA (Victorian Managed Insurance Authority) VMIA was Victoria's Domestic Building Insurance administrator from 2010 to 30 June 2025. From 1 July 2025 the DBI function sits with the BPC.
- glossary 8 May 2026VOC (Verification of Competency) VOC (Verification of Competency) is an on-site practical assessment of a plant operator's competency. Required under harmonised WHS where no formal licence exists.
- glossary 10 May 2026Wafer head Wafer head: very flat, wide screw head for self-drilling Tek screws in light steel framing and metal cladding. Low profile, high pull-through resistance.
- glossary 7 May 2026Waffle pod slab A waffle pod slab uses polystyrene void formers to create a concrete rib grid, preferred on highly reactive (H1/H2) clay sites in Australian residential construction.
- glossary 8 May 2026Waling plate Waling plate: the horizontal timber or steel member fixed to a wall to carry deck joists. NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 12.3 sets minimum sizes and fixing specs.
- glossary 14 May 2026Wall tie A wall tie connects the outer brick leaf to the inner leaf or stud frame. Type and spacing under AS 3700 and NCC Part 5.6 by wind class. Light, medium, heavy duty.
- glossary 9 May 2026WAPC (Western Australian Planning Commission) What the WAPC is: WA's state planning decision-maker for significant developments, strategic planning, and subdivisions under the Planning and Development Act 2005.
- glossary 16 May 2026Warm-edge spacer (IGU) Warm-edge spacer is the low-conductivity bar at the perimeter of an IGU, replacing older aluminium spacers. Eliminates cold-edge bridge and perimeter condensation.
- glossary 26 May 2026Waste outlet (wet area) A waste outlet is the wet-area drain point the membrane is dressed into and the floor falls toward, sealed under AS 3740 and connected under AS 3500.
- glossary 16 May 2026Water penetration resistance (AS 2047 windows/doors) AS 2047 water-penetration-resistance test sprays water on a window at static wind pressure (150-650 Pa). Result is on the permanent performance label.
- glossary 26 May 2026Water resistant (vs waterproof) Water resistant and waterproof are two levels of moisture protection AS 3740 sets for different wet-area zones. Waterproof stops all water; water resistant holds it back.
- glossary 3 June 2026Water suppression (dust) Water suppression feeds water to the cutting point so respirable dust binds and falls rather than going airborne, the first-line engineering control for silica tasks.
- glossary 30 May 2026Water-cement ratio The water-cement ratio (typically 0.45-0.65) is the key lever on concrete strength and durability: lower is stronger and less permeable but harder to place.
- glossary 8 May 2026WaterMark certification WaterMark is the mandatory national certification scheme for plumbing products under NCC Volume Three. Know what to look for before your plumber installs anything.
- glossary 8 May 2026Waterproofer A waterproofer is a licensed trade contractor who applies waterproofing membranes in wet areas. Licensing requirements vary by state in Australia.
- glossary 2 May 2026Waterproofing wet area construction per AS 3740.
- glossary 14 May 2026Waterproofing certificate Waterproofing certificate is the licensed waterproofer's confirmation the membrane is done and flood test passed. NSW, VIC, QLD require it before tiling and claims.
- glossary 30 May 2026Wearing surface A wearing surface is the trafficable finish (tile, pavers, decking) over a membrane that protects it from UV, traffic and impact, part of the waterproofing system.
- glossary 10 May 2026Weather-tightness Weather-tightness is the ability of a building element to resist water ingress under wind-driven rain. AS 2047 sets the performance bar for external windows and doors.
- glossary 11 May 2026Wedge anchor A heavy-duty torque-controlled expansion anchor for permanent structural fixing into concrete. Ramset TruBolt is the common Australian example. AS 5216:2021.
- glossary 7 May 2026Weep hole Weep hole: open perpend at the base course of brick veneer cladding that allows moisture to drain out of the cavity. Missing or blocked weep holes cause rising damp.
- glossary 28 May 2026WEL (Workplace Exposure Limit) WEL (Workplace Exposure Limit) replaces WES from 1 December 2026 as the Safe Work Australia name for airborne-contaminant exposure ceilings on Australian sites.
- glossary 4 June 2026Weld category (GP / SP) Weld category is the AS/NZS 1554 classification of a structural weld (general purpose GP or structural purpose SP) that sets the inspection and quality required.
- glossary 30 May 2026Welded wire fabric Welded wire fabric is the sheet mesh form of reo (SL square, RL rectangular) to AS/NZS 4671, the standard slab reinforcement, laid in lapped sheets.
- glossary 8 May 2026WERS (Window Energy Rating Scheme) WERS is Australia's Window Energy Rating Scheme. It rates windows for thermal performance used in NatHERS 7-star energy modelling under NCC 2022.
- glossary 10 May 2026WES (Workplace Exposure Standard) A WES sets the maximum airborne concentration of a hazardous substance a worker can be exposed to. It's a key threshold in confined space and hazmat work.
- glossary 8 May 2026Wet area A wet area is any room or zone in a residential building that requires a waterproofing system under AS 3740:2021 and NCC 2022 Part 10.2.
- glossary 14 May 2026Wet cutting Wet cutting feeds water onto the blade to suppress respirable crystalline silica at the source. The preferred engineering control under the hierarchy. Builder primer.
- glossary 8 May 2026Wet hire Wet hire means plant hired with a qualified operator. Dry hire means you supply the operator. Key difference for excavation and crane work on residential sites.
- glossary 8 May 2026White Card (Construction Induction) A White Card is the national Construction Induction Card, required for anyone working on an Australian construction site. Covers basic WHS and hazard awareness.
- glossary 4 May 2026Whole of Home (WoH) Whole of Home is the NCC 2022 energy budget for fixed appliances (hot water, heating, cooling, lighting, PV), scored on points alongside the 7-star NatHERS rating.
- glossary 15 May 2026WHS Act Category 1, 2 and 3 offences Model WHS Act ss 31-33: Category 1 (reckless conduct), Category 2 (risk of death/serious injury), Category 3 (general failure). Penalties indexed annually.
- glossary 10 May 2026WHS Management Plan A WHS management plan is a written document required before construction work starts on projects over $250,000, setting out safety roles, rules and procedures.
- glossary 24 May 2026WIC code (WorkCover Industry Classification) A WIC code is the WorkCover Industry Classification your insurer assigns by your main activity. It sets your workers-comp premium rate. Wrong code, wrong premium.
- glossary 10 May 2026Wind classification Wind classification (N1 to N6, C1 to C4) sets the design wind pressure for housing under AS 4055:2021, used to select compliant windows, doors and roof fixings.
- glossary 8 May 2026Wind region Wind region is the geographic wind hazard zone (A, B1, B2, C, D) under AS/NZS 1170.2 and AS 4055. Determines whether a site is non-cyclonic or cyclonic.
- glossary 8 May 2026Wind shielding Wind shielding measures how much surrounding buildings or vegetation reduce wind loads on a site. Used in AS 4055 to determine the site wind class for housing.
- glossary 7 May 2026Winder A winder is a tapered stair tread used to change direction without a landing. NCC 2022 limits consecutive winders to 3 (quarter) or 6 (half landing).
- glossary 11 June 2026Window restrictor A window restrictor limits openable windows to 125 mm where a 2 m+ fall exists in Class 1 and Class 2 buildings. AS 5203 types and the two-step release rule.
- glossary 11 June 2026Window sash A window sash is the framed, openable part that holds the glass. Sash types, sash vs frame, and why sash weight matters for hardware compliance.
- glossary 11 June 2026Withdrawal capacity Withdrawal capacity is a fastener's rated axial pull-out resistance in timber. AS 1720.1 sets it by joint group, diameter, and penetration depth.
- glossary 10 May 2026WMP (Waste Management Plan) A WMP (Waste Management Plan) is a DA or CDC condition requiring builders to document how demolition and construction waste will be sorted, disposed of, and recycled.
- glossary 25 May 2026WorkCover Queensland WorkCover Queensland is the exclusive workers'-compensation insurer for Queensland (bar self-insurers). Employers must hold a policy before employing workers.
- glossary 24 May 2026WorkCover WA WorkCover WA administers WA's workers-compensation scheme under the Workers Compensation and Injury Management Act 2023. Not the same as WorkSafe WA (safety).
- glossary 10 May 2026Workers compensation insurance Workers compensation insurance covers your employees injured at work. Mandatory for all employers in Australia. Separate from public liability insurance.
- glossary 14 May 2026Working at heights ticket Working at heights training (RIIWHS204E) covers fall arrest, harness use, edge protection. Required for ladders, scaffolds, roofs above 2 m in most states.
- glossary 3 June 2026Working capital Working capital is the liquid cash a builder needs to cover trades, materials and payroll during the gap before a stage payment lands; the buffer against cash-flow death.
- glossary 30 May 2026Working days Working days in a building contract exclude weekends and public holidays; they count EOT and variation windows, and are not the same as SOP business days.
- glossary 2 May 2026Workmanship Workmanship is the quality of how a job is built and finished. Judged against contract spec, AS standards, and the HIA Guide to Materials and Workmanship.
- glossary 15 May 2026Workplace manslaughter (criminal offence) Workplace manslaughter (Vic s39G from 2020, Qld, ACT, NSW since 2024). Up to 25 years for individuals, $16.5M for body corporates. Tougher penalty for the same duty.
- glossary 14 May 2026WorkSafe WorkSafe is the common name for the state workplace safety regulator and workers comp insurer (Victoria, ACT, WA, Tasmania). Functions differ from icare and SafeWork NSW.
- glossary 25 May 2026WorkSafe Victoria WorkSafe Victoria regulates safety under the Victorian OHS Act 2004 (not the harmonised WHS Act) and manages the Victorian WorkCover workers'-comp scheme.
- glossary 23 May 2026Written disclosure notice (Qld owner-builder) Qld Building Act 1975 mandatory written notice given to a buyer before contract when an owner-builder sells within 6 years of completion. Buyer signs first.
- glossary 9 May 2026WSC (Water Servicing Coordinator) A WSC (Water Servicing Coordinator) is a Sydney Water-accredited firm managing Section 73 applications and water or sewer works for NSW developers.
- glossary 14 May 2026Xero Projects Xero Projects is Xero's paid add-on for project-level estimates, time, expenses, and profitability reporting. Right for builders running 10+ concurrent jobs.
- glossaryXPS (extruded polystyrene) Extruded polystyrene (XPS): denser and more moisture-resistant than EPS, used in cornice profiles and under-slab insulation in Australian construction.
- glossary 30 May 2026Yield strength Yield strength is the stress (MPa) at which steel deforms permanently, the number behind a grade (Grade 300, C350L0). Substituting another grade is a non-compliance.
- glossary 14 May 2026Zincalume Zincalume is BlueScope's 55% Al / 43.5% Zn / 1.5% Si coated steel for roof and wall cladding. AZ150 and AZ200 grades. The base under Colorbond's painted finish.
- glossary 1 June 2026Zone code (land-use zone) A zone code (R1, R2, R3 in NSW) is the land-use category a planning instrument gives a parcel; its use table and development standards govern what can be built.
- glossary 16 May 2026Zone of influence (footing, wall, or tree) Zone of influence is the horizontal distance around a footing, wall, or tree where loads or moisture changes affect adjacent structures, per AS 2870.