Govt takes control of earthquake-prone building decisions from local councils
By Sophie Boot
July 3 (BusinessDesk) - Central government has taken control of earthquake-prone building regulation, with new
legislation that will compel building owners to fix or demolish dangerous structures within set timeframes.
The Earthquake-prone Buildings Amendment Act came into effect on July 1, and was launched this morning by Building and
Construction Minister Nick Smith in Wellington's St Mary of the Angels church, which re-opened in April after four years
of restoration to bring it up to code.
The new act removes local councils' requirements to have their own individual policies, and create a single national
policy framework. It divides New Zealand into three earthquake categories, with timeframes for building assessment and
repair dependent on the perceived seismic risk.
In high-risk areas, such as Wellington, Christchurch, and Napier, buildings must be assessed within five years and
upgraded within 15 years; in medium-risk places such as Hamilton, Nelson and Invercargill, that lengthens to 10 and 25
years respectively, and in low-risk Auckland and Dunedin, it is 15 and 35 years.
"The government is trying to carefully balance the issues of cost, the issues of heritage as well as the issues of
safety," Smith said. "It does involve a difficult trade-off, but what we think is that this regime places it at a rate
at which the engineering sector is able to support the upgrades. We want the greatest effort going into the likes of
Wellington where risks are highest, we are prepared to give more time in areas like Dunedin and Auckland where the risk
is a lot less."
Schools, hospitals and emergency buildings must be assessed and upgraded in half the time, while registered heritage
buildings and those deemed low risk and low use can receive a 10-year extension. The government is prioritising
unreinforced masonry facades and parapets in high traffic areas, Smith said, due to the loss of life in the 2011
Christchurch earthquake from these features, and has, alongside local councils and building owners, invested between $9
million and $10 million dollars in that.
Smith said it was the "most ambitious seismic regulatory regime anywhere in the world" due to the regulation of existing
buildings. "These new laws involve an uncomfortable and inevitable trade-off between safety and cost but will save
hundreds of lives in future quakes when fully implemented."
(BusinessDesk)
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