Designers – know your responsibilities

By - , Build 164

Under the Building Act 2004, people taking part in building work have certain responsibilities. What are they if you are a designer?

IN THE LAST EDITION of Build, we looked at builders’ responsibilities on site, including those of licensed building practitioners (LBPs). This time, we are looking at designers’ responsibilities.

Some of these responsibilities are highlighted under sections 14A–14G of the Building Act to ensure that, if you take part in building work, you are responsible for your part of the project.

Who is a designer?

Section 14D applies to designers. It states that, for the purposes of these responsibilities, a designer includes anyone who is preparing plans and specifications for building work (not necessarily under a building consent). It also includes giving advice about building work compliance with the Building Code, whether or not the work requires a building consent.

This means that designers could include:

  • a person holding a design licence (1, 2 or 3)
  • an architect who is preparing plans and specifications for a building consent application
  • an engineer engaged to design and inspect building work undertaken to ensure it is structurally compliant
  • a builder who takes on the role of a designer and drafts some plans for a client detailing building work that will not require building consent, such as a low-level deck.

Designers’ responsibilities and obligations

A designer has only one responsibility under section 14D, unlike a builder who has several under section 14E.

The designer’s responsibility is to ensure that their advice or plans and specifications, if followed, will result in building work that complies with the Building Code. As the designer may not be involved in the construction, they are not responsible for whether the building work complies with the Building Code.

It is important that designers are aware of their other obligations that relate to, but are not specifically mentioned in, section 14D. This includes being aware of and not breaching any of the grounds for discipline for an LBP – set out under section 317. Other sections of the Act also state that you need to be licensed to carry out or supervise design-restricted building work.

New competency added

In 2016, small changes were made to the competencies in the LBP rules for the Design licence class so that the competencies remain relevant and are easier to understand. Also, a new competency was added for contract administration and construction observation and applies to Design 2 and 3 areas of practice.

Contracting obligations were highlighted in other areas for Design 1 licence class holders as well as other minor changes.

Including elements of contract administration as a core competency indicates how important it is. A designer who acts inappropriately in their contract administration role could face sanctions because such conduct might be grounds for discipline for negligence or incompetence. 

Quiz

1. As a designer, what are my obligations in relation to advice I give about building work?
a. You are responsible for ensuring that the builder carries out the building work in accordance with the Building Code.
b. Your advice should result in the work being compliant with the Building Code, as long as the advice is followed by others.
c. Everyone else must agree with your advice.

2. Did anything change last year for Design 1 licence holders?
a. No, the only change was a new competency for Design 2 and 3 licences.
b. Yes, some contracting obligations were highlighted among other minor changes.
c. No, section 14D of the Building Act has not changed.

3. When drafting plans for a small 2 × 3 m shed on a property, is a designer responsible for ensuring Building Code compliance in the plans?
a. Yes, this responsibility applies to all building work.
b. No, this work is exempt building work. Only the builder is responsible for building it right.
c. No, but you need to get building consent for that.

Answers: 1. b 2. b 3. a

Note

You can read more about the design competency changes in Codewords issue 76 at www.building.govt.nz.

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