Window hardware in Australian construction: latches, stays, restrictors, locks
Window hardware in Australian construction: AS 5203 child restrictors, latches, stays, casement and sash, Whitco Doric brands, defects.
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Window hardware is the assembly of latches, stays, restrictors, and locks that operates and secures windows across Class 1a houses, Class 2 apartments, and Class 3-9 commercial buildings. Commercial applications add heavier-duty stays, restrictor sets approved for higher occupancy loads, and acoustic-rated frames to the same product families. The single most important compliance call is child window restrictors under AS 5203:2016 and NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Part 11.5: any window in a Class 1 (dwelling) or Class 2 (apartment) building where the opening is 2 metres or more above the surface below AND the opening would be wider than 125 mm, must be fitted with a restrictor or screen that limits the opening to 125 mm or less. The restrictor can be permanent or have a release mechanism that requires a deliberate two-step action. The other hardware categories: latches (hold the window closed), stays (hold the window at a specific open position), locks (key or thumb-turn securing for security), handles (operating mechanism for the sash), and casement gear (the friction-stay arm that controls casement and awning windows). The AU brand market is led by Whitco (the dominant sliding-window hardware brand), Doric (window-and-door hardware specialist), Pryda, Logikhaus (premium uPVC and timber window hardware), and the European brands Roto Frank and Maco (premium thermally-broken uPVC windows). The two job-killers: missing or undersized restrictors on upper-storey bedroom windows (a real defect that NCC compliance audits catch, and a real safety issue if a child can fall), and galvanic corrosion in coastal locations from mixed-metal hardware (steel and aluminium hardware in salt-spray exposure fails within years).
What it is
Window hardware refers to all the mechanical components fitted to a window assembly that control opening, closing, locking, and restriction. The Australian Standard for the window assembly itself is AS 2047:2014 (Windows and external glazed doors in buildings); window-specific safety requirements (child restrictors) are in AS 5203:2016; window-lock security follows AS 4145.2:2008 where applicable.
The categories:
| Category | Function | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Latch | Holds window closed under wind load and casual use | Cam latch, claw latch, slide latch |
| Lock | Secures window against unauthorised opening | Key-locked sash lock, push-button lock, thumb-turn |
| Stay | Holds window at one or more open positions | Friction stay, chain stay, telescopic stay |
| Restrictor | Limits maximum opening for safety | Cable restrictor, scissor restrictor, fixed bar |
| Handle / operator | The user-facing control | Cam handle, lever, push-bar, crank handle |
| Casement gear | Controls casement window operation | Friction hinge, motorised actuator |
| Sash balance | Counterweights sash window | Spring balance, cord-and-weight |
| Screen | Insect or pet screen (also serves as restrictor in some products) | Fixed screen, retractable, sliding |
AS 5203 child window restrictors
Under NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Part 11.5 (Protection of openable windows), restrictors are mandatory in specific situations:
| Situation | Restrictor required? |
|---|---|
| Window in Class 1a/1b/2 building, opening 2 m or more above surface below, opening can be wider than 125 mm | Yes (AS 5203:2016) |
| Same as above but opening is 125 mm or less | No (already child-safe) |
| Same as above but window does not open | No |
| Surface below is less than 2 m drop (ground-floor or rear deck within 2 m) | No |
| Class 3+ buildings | Different criteria; check NCC |
The restrictor must:
- Limit the maximum opening to 125 mm or less in its restricted state
- Have a release mechanism that requires a deliberate two-step action (not just a single button press)
- Be complementary to (not the primary) means of operation: the window must still be operable by adults
- Comply with AS 5203:2016 impact and durability tests
Common restrictor designs:
- Cable restrictor: cable attached to sash and frame; limits opening; releases by detaching the cable (with key or two-finger pinch)
- Scissor restrictor: linked-arm device; limits opening; releases via lever
- Fixed bar / dowel: removable bar limiting opening; release by removing the bar
- Window grille / screen: permanent grille that meets the 125 mm rule structurally
The restrictor is NOT the same as a fly screen. A fly screen does not restrict the opening; it just keeps insects out. Some products combine restrictor and screen, but a generic fly screen alone does not satisfy AS 5203.
Window types and their hardware
Different window types use different hardware:
Sliding window (horizontal sliding, sash sliding)
Sash slides horizontally on track. Volume residential in Australia.
| Hardware | Examples |
|---|---|
| Latch / lock | Whitco DL series sash lock; cam lock; positive-locking sash lock |
| Restrictor | Cable restrictor across the sash track |
| Operator | Pull handle on the sash; sliding action |
Awning window (top-hinged, opens outward)
Top of sash hinged; bottom swings out.
| Hardware | Examples |
|---|---|
| Friction stay (casement gear) | Roto, Doric, Maco friction hinges |
| Cam lock or shoot bolt | Single lever lock; auto-engage shoot bolt |
| Restrictor | Limit pin on the friction stay limits travel |
Casement window (side-hinged, opens outward)
Side hinged; swings out from one side.
| Hardware | Examples |
|---|---|
| Friction stay | Maco, Roto; provides movement and holds open |
| Lever lock | Multipoint at sash edge engaging frame |
| Restrictor | Limit pin on stay or cable restrictor |
Double-hung sash window (vertical sliding)
Two sashes slide vertically.
| Hardware | Examples |
|---|---|
| Sash balance | Spring or cord-and-weight balances each sash |
| Cam lock | Top-rail sash lock |
| Stay / restrictor | Sash limiter at top of bottom sash |
Tilt-and-turn window (premium uPVC/aluminium)
Sash can tilt inward at top (ventilation) or swing inward fully (cleaning).
| Hardware | Examples |
|---|---|
| Roto NT / Maco MULTI gearing | Internal corner-drive multipoint mechanism |
| Lever handle | Single lever rotates to select tilt/turn/closed |
| Restrictor | Tilt mode restricts top opening; built-in |
Bi-fold window (concertina)
Multiple sashes fold together.
| Hardware | Examples |
|---|---|
| Bi-fold runner / hardware kit | Centor, Brio, Logikhaus |
| Multipoint lock | Engages all sashes simultaneously |
| Restrictor | Hardware-specific; check product compliance |
Australian brands
| Brand | Range | Where used |
|---|---|---|
| Whitco (Allegion / DUlock) | Sliding window locks, sash locks, restrictors; the dominant Australian brand | Volume residential |
| Doric | Window and door hardware, friction stays | National |
| Maco (Austrian) | Premium tilt-and-turn, casement gear | uPVC and thermally-broken aluminium premium |
| Roto Frank (German) | Premium tilt-and-turn, casement gear | Premium European-style windows |
| Pryda (Multinail) | Standard residential restrictors and locks | Volume residential |
| Logikhaus | Premium European hardware integration | Specifier-led, uPVC |
| Centor | Bi-fold and stacking door hardware (with overlap into windows) | Premium |
| Brio | Sliding and pivot specialist | Premium |
| AGB | Italian premium concealed hardware | Premium specifier |
For volume residential aluminium-framed windows: Whitco for sliding, Doric for awning and casement gear. For premium uPVC or thermally-broken aluminium: Maco or Roto Frank. For bi-fold doors and large bi-fold windows: Brio, Centor, or Logikhaus.
Hardware materials and corrosion
Window hardware in residential coastal locations (within 1 km of breaking surf) needs corrosion-resistant materials. The standard materials and their environments:
| Material | Where used |
|---|---|
| Zinc-plated steel | Internal, dry, non-coastal |
| Chrome-plated steel | Internal volume residential |
| Stainless 304 | Most internal and inland residential |
| Stainless 316 | Coastal exterior; salt-spray exposure |
| Anodised aluminium | Some operators on aluminium windows |
| Brass | Heritage and decorative; not for coastal |
Galvanic corrosion: mixing aluminium window frame with steel hardware in a coastal property accelerates corrosion of both metals. Specify stainless 316 hardware throughout in coastal exterior.
Common defects and on-site issues
- Missing restrictor on upper-storey bedroom window: NCC compliance failure and child-safety issue. Restrictors must be on every Class 1/2 window 2 m+ above surface below with opening capable of >125 mm.
- Restrictor with single-step release (a flip-up bar with no secondary catch): non-compliant with AS 5203’s two-step requirement. The release must require two deliberate actions.
- Fly screen treated as restrictor: a fly screen is not a restrictor unless specifically tested and certified to AS 5203.
- Galvanic corrosion in coastal property: zinc-plated or chrome-plated hardware in salt-spray fails within years. Specify stainless 316.
- Friction stay over-tightened or under-tightened: window doesn’t stay open OR doesn’t fully close. Adjust the friction screw on the stay.
- Sash lock cam misaligned: lock doesn’t engage cleanly. Adjust strike plate or cam height.
- Cord-and-weight sash balance failed: bottom sash drops to the sill. Re-cord or replace with spring balance.
- Bi-fold sash binding during operation: hardware out of square; adjust roller heights or replace damaged carrier.
- Lock cylinder seized in coastal exposure: salt corrodes the cylinder pins. Specify stainless 316 lock body or specifically marine-rated lock.
- Restrictor key lost (and homeowner can’t open in fire emergency): provide spare keys with the building handover; for fire-egress windows, use cable restrictors with pull-release rather than keyed.
Pricing (2026 indicative, ex-GST, supply only, per unit)
| Item | Indicative cost |
|---|---|
| Whitco sash lock (sliding window) | $20-45 |
| Whitco cable restrictor (AS 5203 compliant) | $35-75 |
| Cam handle for awning/casement | $25-65 |
| Maco friction stay (premium) | $60-140 |
| Roto NT tilt-and-turn gear kit (per window) | $180-360 |
| Bi-fold multipoint lock (Centor) | $250-540 |
| Sash balance (spring, per sash) | $35-75 |
| Stainless 316 premium for coastal exposure | +50-150% over standard |
For a typical residential window order, hardware adds approximately $80-200 per opening on top of the frame and glazing supply.
Standards and references
- Standards Australia, AS 2047:2014 Windows and external glazed doors in buildings. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Standards Australia, AS 5203:2016 Protection of openable windows in buildings. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Standards Australia, AS 4145.2:2008 Mechanical locks for doors used in buildings. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Australian Building Codes Board, NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Part 11 (Safe movement and access). https://ncc.abcb.gov.au/editions/ncc-2022/adopted/housing-provisions (verified 2026-05-13).
Related
- Door locks and handles
- Door hinges
- Double glazing
- AS 2047 windows (compliance)
- AS 5203 child window restrictors (compliance)
- Glazier (trade)
See also
- Window restrictor (glossary)
- ABCB Housing Provisions (glossary)
- Child safety (glossary)
- Casement window (glossary)
- Awning window (glossary)
Last updated: 2026-05-13. Verified: 2026-05-13. Quarterly review for AS 5203 currency and pricing.