It shows that the money paid to councils for building inspectors
can be wasted as they are not qualified to do their jobs.
Just like the Grenfell tower - no one wants to pay:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/201 ... tower-fire
cods wrote: ↑Wed Dec 26, 2018 6:22 pmthey are all involved..Bobs... all of them.. everyone dept they go through has to be PAID
the reason being is because they are meant to know more than the rest of us....
I have posted in the thread at ozpol.......you will see how pearshaped this project has always been.....
even the site its built on sounds suss...
and the ripple effect hasnt taken hold yet either.....I dont think I would like to be living next door either.
That whole area is unstable and was a toxic dump site for hazardous chemicals and heavy metals for decades. There used to be a horrible chemical smell in the area and although I was rarely ever in that area I can still smell it now when I think about it.
Black Orchid wrote: ↑Wed Dec 26, 2018 6:56 pmThat whole area is unstable and was a toxic dump site for hazardous chemicals and heavy metals for decades. There used to be a horrible chemical smell in the area and although I was rarely ever in that area I can still smell it now when I think about it.
When I was doing my degree we did a lot of field work and research out there and there were spots where slime was just bubbling in pools at the surface.
https://www.news.com.au/finance/busines ... 756ecd95bfExperts have come out swinging over the “boom-burdened” building industry in major cities, saying Sydney’s cracking Opal Tower is part of a much wider problem.
But now the developer of the Olympic Park building has hit back, saying any suggestion the damage points to “a broader pattern in the industry” is completely wrong.
“The city’s ‘development boom’ has not led to cutting of corners,” Ecove director Bassam Aflak said in a statement this morning. “There has been no cutting of corners.”
Mr Aflak’s comments come after waterproofing consultant Ross Taylor wrote a controversial opinion piece for the Sydney Morning Herald.
Mr Taylor said while it was too early to tell who was at fault, a pattern had been emerging industry-wide.
He details problems with a high-rise down the road that had not made front page news because the structural failure was more gradual.
Mr Taylor said the balconies started sagging gradually after residents moved in — some as much as 180mm.
“As a result, cracks have opened up, water runs away from the outlets and pools on the balconies,” he said.
“Such stories are being lived throughout our apartment boom-burdened major cities by owners who suspected nothing when they bought. Culprits and scapegoats for these and other defects are sometimes found but root causes are rarely identified.”
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