NZCB InHouse magazine June/July 2022

Page 18

FROM NZCB —

What is a 10-year building guarantee? What does a 10-year building guarantee cover? A 10-year building guarantee provides cover to the Homeowner should a structural or weathertightness defect arise, and the builder is no longer willing or around to come back and address these defects with the homeowner. It provides much greater protection than both the Building Act 2004 and Consumer Guarantees Act.

Are they required by law? Under the Building Act there is a 10-year implied warranty period. All residential building work in New Zealand, no matter how big or small, is covered by the implied warranties set out in the Building Act. The majority of banks are now requesting that homeowners get extra protection when applying for lending to finance a building project, in the form of a 10-year building guarantee. As a member of New Zealand Certified Builders (NZCB) you are able to offer this additional protection through the Halo 10-Year Residential Guarantee.

The Halo Guarantee provides unique protection not only for the homeowner but also the builder under the Waiver of Subrogation, a benefit exclusive to NZCB Business members.

What does the Halo 10-Year Residential Guarantee cover that is additional to the 10-year implied warranty by law? The Halo 10-Year Residential Guarantee is an extra service that the Builder or Homeowner purchases. This gives additional protection to a newly constructed home or renovation against qualified structural, weathertightness and non-structural defects. In the event of a claim being made and you the builder, are unwilling or unable to respond to the defects then Halo Guarantees Limited will step in. The Halo Guarantee provides unique protection not only for the homeowner but also the builder under the Waiver of Subrogation, a benefit exclusive to NZCB Business members. The Halo Guarantee covers the following: Floors – examples of structural elements • Concrete foundations, foundation walls and floor systems • Piles and bracing elements, bearers, joists, subfloor framing • Inter-story flooring • Structural retaining and block walls Walls – examples of structural elements • Structural framing e.g. beams, lintels • Bracing elements and fixings e.g. Ridged air barriers which provide bracing • Structural steel portals, beams and columns Roof – examples of structural elements • Trusses, rafters, purlins, tile battens and bracing members • Ceiling diaphragms • Sheathing material such as ply

What are homeowners covered for under New Zealand law? • Building works and building materials – under the Building Act’s implied warranties • Services provided by tradespeople – under the Consumer Guarantees Act • Misleading claims – under the Fair-Trading Act.

When do the warranties not apply? A building practitioner isn’t liable if the defect is caused by: • Events beyond human control • Accidental damage caused by others – but not subcontractors or anyone that the builder is legally responsible for • The homeowner not carrying out normal maintenance • The homeowner not carrying out or arranging to have repairs done, as soon as practicable after a defect becomes apparent • If the homeowner has not taken their contractor’s advice.

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Decks – if cover goes outside of primary structure • Piles and bracing elements, bearers, joists, stringers, subfloor framing • Decking material • Balusters, handrails, posts • Pergola or other structure over, if carrying a roof. In addition to structural defects, there are conditions in the Halo Guarantee to cover workmanship and material defects for a set period of time. This is when the building work or materials have either failed or are not in compliance with the Building Code and the New Zealand standards applicable at the time of the Practical Completion Date, whereby the item is not fit for its intended use and does not fall within the tolerances as set out in the Guide to Acceptable Tolerances applicable at the Practical Completion Date.


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Articles inside

NZCB Affinity Partners

2min
page 70

IN THE MEDIA

31min
pages 66-69

Salt smart

1min
page 63

Installation tips to avoid sliding into trouble

1min
page 62

Winter temperatures are more critical than we think

2min
pages 60-61

Message from the AST Trust

1min
pages 56-57

NEWS BITES

5min
pages 58-59

Is TikTok good for business?

3min
page 50

Events Calendar

0
page 51

Preparing for winter

2min
page 48

Looking after the most important person – you

3min
pages 46-47

Overlapping duties – who’s responsible for what?

6min
pages 44-45

Maximising profit on charge-up jobs

5min
pages 42-43

Employee or contractor… are your working arrangements sound?

4min
pages 40-41

NZCB Apprentice Challenge Sponsored by ITM – Regional Competitions 2022

5min
pages 36-39

You should use determinations under the Building Act

7min
pages 34-35

GIB® Plasterboard supply update

5min
pages 30-31

Are you driving your business blindfolded?

3min
pages 32-33

Make your business more competitive with tech

4min
pages 28-29

Putting our partners in the spotlight

1min
pages 22-23

H1 Building Code updates

3min
pages 26-27

Scruffs clothing and footwear

1min
pages 20-21

Message from our Acting Chief Executive

5min
pages 8-9

What is a 10-year building guarantee?

5min
pages 18-19

The benefits of using a single insurance broker

3min
pages 14-15

NZCB’s new Chief Executive Officer

1min
page 7

Message from the NZCB Board

3min
page 4

Board Bites

3min
page 6

Notice of NZCB Annual General Meeting

1min
page 5
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