Use these tips to help your building project run well and ensure you know how to meet your legal obligations.
- Plan well, thinking about how the build will work for you now and in the future (and for future owners).
- Understand the building stages so you can prepare ahead, know what’s happening next, understand timeframes and meet your obligations. Getting your design finalised often takes three to four months and the build another six months or more.
- Contact your council early in the process and establish a good working relationship. They have a lot of information that can help you build it right.
- Budget well and be practical by allowing for changes and increased costs, which can be very common. Get help if you need it. Be clear about your budget with your design professional and consider using a quantity surveyor to help you determine costs.
- Don’t make assumptions. Ask questions if you have them. Write down responses, to help everyone remember.
- Involve the right people for your project, so that you get the right results. Some tasks might be simple and others might require you to use licensed building professionals or qualified specialists.
- Decide who will be the project manager, whether it’s the homeowner, builder, architect or someone dedicated to the role (the size of your project will probably determine how much work is involved). The right person will keep the project running, coordinate subcontractors, keep up with council requirements and stick to the budget.
- Even if your job is simple, a contract can protect you if things go wrong. If your project is over a certain amount, you must get a contract. Make sure you understand what you are signing and get your lawyer to review it first.
- Make a good building consent application, with accurate, relevant supporting documentation, drawings and specifications. It should make the application process smoother and help your build, as the consented documents become the plan everyone will follow.
- Keep good records on site, somewhere safe and accessible to everyone (plans and specifications, building consent, record of work and energy work certificates). You could also keep a brief build diary to note key dates and deliveries.
- Have a health and safety plan in place from day one of construction, and make sure everyone keeps to it. Understand your obligations under the health and safety legislation.
- Work to your building consent (if you can’t, be sure to talk to your council about varying your plans).
- Understand and meet your obligations – from complying with the Building Code and paying people through to inspections and final sign-off (and everything in between).