Resource consent rules reminder
28 Jul 2016, Featured, LBP & Regulation
As part of our commitment to helping Licensed Building Practitioners earn their required skills maintenance points, we’ll be including all required Codewords articles in Under Construction
Under the new skills maintenance scheme, reading Codewords articles and answering the corresponding questions is a compulsory part of skills maintenance – for those who have renewed their licence since
2 November 2015. Once you’ve read the article, found on the LBP website (under Codewords Issue 72), make sure to answer the associated questions.
Resource consents and what you need to know
You need to have a good working knowledge of the ‘rules’ that apply to any land you are working on, including the requirements of any resource consent.
A resource consent is authorisation from your local council to undertake certain works or activities on a piece of land. These works may affect the environment and natural surroundings (bush, land, water, sky and animals), or the people and community nearby (including streetscapes, light and noise aspects, and heritage considerations).
On a construction site, these activities may include:
- Large-scale earthworks.
- A building footprint larger or closer to a boundary than the district plan allows.
- A new dwelling located in a flood-prone or contaminated area.
- Works in close proximity to a watercourse, on a steep gradient, in a natural heritage area and/or in a coastal environment.
Resource consents come with a set of conditions that reduce the risks to the environment and community. Common conditions for a residential new build may include:
- Sediment controls, such as silt fences and stabilised entrances.
- Limiting on-site hours of work to prevent excessive noise in the community.
- Certificates from trades such as engineers, surveyors and drainlayers.
- Construction and traffic management plans.
Although you may not be the holder of the resource consent, you and your subcontractors are required to comply with its conditions while undertaking activities on site.
Failure to comply with the conditions can result in your site being shut down, fines or court action, or both.
Before you start working, obtain a copy of all consents from whoever engaged you to do the works, and ensure you understand the conditions. Contact your local council if you have any questions.
When you finish a project, make sure you review both the resource consent and building consent, and submit any required documents to council. These may include geotechnical reports, survey certificates, drainage plans or any report required under the consent.
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