[200WILLIAM-EC SP67851] Building report
Craig Laforest
cscl at optusnet.com.au
Sat Dec 16 09:58:37 AEDT 2023
EC,
Matt G, you may ask me to only refer to comments made in the report,
however, I will continue to refer to the experts I know and rely on.
Regards, Craig
----- Original Message -----
From:
"Paul Mooney" <paulmooney at manxpm.com.au>
To:
"Matthew Guy" <matthew_guy at hotmail.com>
Cc:
"Craig Laforest" <cscl at optusnet.com.au>, <ec at mailman.perkins.id.au>
Sent:
Sat, 16 Dec 2023 09:10:24 +1100
Subject:
Re: [200WILLIAM-EC SP67851] Building report
EC,
I agree with this summary from Matt and repeat my statement from
yesterday.
` It seems we have little to consider until the technical
specifications for remedial work are obtained, which is obviously
necessary ASAP.’
I think we must now be patient , even though difficult, and wait for
the follow up more detailed report and stop the speculative
correspondence.
Enjoy your weekend.
Regards
Paul
Sent from my iPhone
On 16 Dec 2023, at 8:47 am, Matthew Guy <matthew_guy at hotmail.com>
wrote:
Hi Craig,
As the EC, the owners place trust in us to make the best decisions
for the building based on, where necessary, professional
recommendation.
We have engaged a professional in this instance and they have
provided a report.
To avoid confusion, and ensure we are all on the same page, please
only refer to the findings in this report, using the same terminology
as was used by the engineers.
Your two contractors have not been engaged by the strata so their
opinions on the matter are not relevant in this instance.
Regards,
Matt G
On 16 Dec 2023, at 7:37 am, Craig Laforest <cscl at optusnet.com.au>
wrote:
I have spoken to two other contractors who work on properties I own
and they have used the words 'concrete cancer' on our building, after
viewing the exposed steel. The engineer's report was also supposed
to have a response to the cladding by taking a sample of the wall
panel used for our walls but that didn't happen. Sarah, would you
please check with the contractor how he missed that. Thank you.
----- Original Message -----
From:
matt at perkins.id.au
To:
"kylie Curtis" <kyliemcurtis at yahoo.com>, "Craig Laforest"
<cscl at optusnet.com.au>
Cc:
<ec at mailman.perkins.id.au>
Sent:
Fri, 15 Dec 2023 21:46:21 +1100
Subject:
Re: [200WILLIAM-EC SP67851] Building report
Hi Craig,
The engineer did not mention concrete cancer in their report.
Although they mentioned spalling, they referred to the steel angle
which is on the edges of the render. That's hardly concrete cancer.
Let's not over-dramatise this. It's mostly cosmetic; there's no
evidence of the structure of the building being compromised. There is
no exposed steel reinforcement in the slabs, which is what most people
call concrete cancer. It's worth noting that these emails form part of
the strata record and directly affect the prices in the building. It's
up to us as EC members to take a cool head and not adversely affect
peoples' apartment values. Throwing words like concrete cancer around
does little other than lower our property values. Paul sent an email
recently outlining this, but it seems to have fallen on deaf ears.
We are all aware of the problems with the render; that is why we
agreed to get the report. We have all agreed on the next steps. We all
want a resolution as quickly as possible. I'm not sure what the point
of your email is other than to be vexatious.
We are all working together here for a resolution. I would appreciate
you working with us on this one and not damaging the property values
any further by throwing around unnecessary emotive descriptions.
Matt
Matt -- ** DO NOT SEND PRIVATE OR CONFIDENTIAL MATERIAL VIA EMAIL
Matt Perkins 0403571333
On 15 Dec 2023 at 9:00 PM +1100, Craig Laforest
<cscl at optusnet.com.au>, wrote:
Hello everyone,
I would like to highlight that concrete cancer is not a simply issue
As you may be aware, concrete is a porous material and when used for
construction, reinforcing steel is inserted to bolster its strength.
Since concrete is porous, it can absorb water and salt air very
easily, which corrodes the steel inside. This process is what gives a
structure concrete cancer. When water is absorbed through the
concrete, along with salt air (which the report mentioned), the result
is concrete cancer. When the cancer appears, it's because the steel
inside the concrete, expands. When it expands, it cracks the
concrete. I have it in numerous areas on my deck and on the window
ledges. Rusting steel angles are considered concrete cancer. We do not
have render inside the concrete. We have steel, which is exposed in
many places.
We must attack this problem ASAP.
Cheers,
Craig
----- Original Message -----
From:
matt at perkins.id.au
To:
"kylie Curtis" <kyliemcurtis at yahoo.com>
Cc:
"ec at mailman.perkins.id.au" <ec at mailman.perkins.id.au>
Sent:
Fri, 15 Dec 2023 15:54:55 +1100
Subject:
Re: [200WILLIAM-EC SP67851] Building report
Hi Kylie.
No I have requested a quote to create a scope of work. Once we
agree to that quote a scope and technical specifications can be
created. We can then use those specifications to put the work out to
tender and then we can have a GM to adopt one of the quotes and
generate either additional budget or a special levy.
I have never seen any “concrete cancer” in this building.
Concrete cancer typically refers to corrosion in steel reinforcement.
Our building is brick with render. As far as I’m aware the only
place we could have concrete cancer is in the slabs between floors and
there has never been any indication of that. There’s some rusting
steel angle but that’s not concrete cancer. What we are talking
about here is cosmetic and waterproofing not structural as concrete
cancer can be.
Warm regards
Matt
Matt
Matt -- ** DO NOT SEND PRIVATE OR CONFIDENTIAL MATERIAL VIA EMAIL
Matt Perkins 0403571333
On 15 Dec 2023 at 3:39 PM +1100, kylie Curtis
<kyliemcurtis at yahoo.com>, wrote:
Thank you Matt.
Will the engineer follow up with quotes for the works that need to be
carried out immediately?
It looks like there’s a lot of work to be carried out and I note
the images and points around rust and moisture in the facade and
building but I don’t see anything about concrete cancer, unless
I’m missing something?
Warm Regards,
Kylie
Sent from my iPhone
On 15 Dec 2023, at 3:02 pm, matt at perkins.id.au wrote:
Hi All,
You can download the building report from the included link. It's to
big for email. There's nothing unexpected there that I can see. I have
ask Sarah to follow up and get a quote for the work to generate the
technical spec for rectification which can be used for the tender
process.
Warm regards
Matt
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/q5pt0me38tq9nnzbzn663/200-William-Street-Woolloomooloo-Building-Condition-Assessment.pdf?rlkey=pw5w47r3vfn4alod7hj10ah5m&dl=0
Matt -- ** DO NOT SEND PRIVATE OR CONFIDENTIAL MATERIAL VIA EMAIL
Matt Perkins 0403571333
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