Dire warning to Aussies in apartments

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 5. 05. 2024
  • Sky News host Caleb Bond has responded to a dire warning to New South Wales residents about the quality of their new build apartments.
    A new report from the New South Wales government, which looked at 600 new or strata buildings, found 53 per cent of them had serious or major defects within six years of being built.
    “People would prefer not to live in cheaply built apartments, but they don’t have much choice," Mr Bond said.
    “There’s not much choice around.
    “We dud ourselves on two accounts, we bring all these people in for whom we don’t have housing.
    “We build the housing, but then the housing is rubbish and you have to pay more to fix it up further down the line.”

Komentáře • 781

  • @bruceevennett955
    @bruceevennett955 Před 21 dnem +20

    There are plenty of beautifully well built buildings from the the 50s and 60s that will stand the test of time as architectural masterpieces

  • @amon5124
    @amon5124 Před 25 dny +85

    One word - CORRUPTION

    • @colinpeacock7648
      @colinpeacock7648 Před 21 dnem +7

      Yes you are absolutely right there Thank you. Corruption is is slowly creeping into the country and if not nipped in the bud will get worse and out of control. Australia is no more the country it used to be sorry to say that

    • @amon5124
      @amon5124 Před 21 dnem +4

      @@colinpeacock7648 couldn’t agree with you more mate.

  • @gabebabe1
    @gabebabe1 Před 26 dny +328

    The developers need to be jailed

    • @Nathan-ry3yu
      @Nathan-ry3yu Před 26 dny +16

      More than half of the builders aren't even qualified builders they from overseas, and they don't meet Australian qualifications to build. You will find many of them probably worked for builders as apprentice or handyman overseas. But they are not qualified to be a builder in Australia. And yet someone passed their doggy overseas certificates here in Australia to have an ABN licence to build. Most of them probably only have a 2nd or 3rd year certificates or have only worked as handyman for a builder for a decade or so and have no certification other than reference coming to Australia and getting ABN numbers. People wonder why the houses and buildings have many defects

    • @deborahcurtis1385
      @deborahcurtis1385 Před 26 dny +5

      This is what happens with hands-off government, and self regulation.
      We want low taxes and small government? This is what you get.
      Leave it to the market? This is what you get.
      We are at a low water mark for government intervention and supply of affordable housing.
      Even Sir Robert Menzies who founded the Liberal Party, actively was involved in the supply of affordable housing built by government using taxes.
      Nothing else will work. Nothing.

    • @Nathan-ry3yu
      @Nathan-ry3yu Před 26 dny +6

      ​​​​​@@deborahcurtis1385I agree..more government regulations inspection needed on building. During the 80s it was big. Not so much today. Too many doggy builders not meeting compliance regulations. And you will find more than half of them aren't even qualified. Overseas builders who have 2nd or 3rd year apprentice or was handyman for a builders for over a decade or so and now living here in Australia with ABN number claiming to be qualified builders. Inspector not long ago found over 134 defects on just one house. Theirs no way the builders could be qualified to have so much defects. This is happening on regular basis. Theirs some buildings gone up that the government has banned anyone to live in as they are considered dangerous.

    • @mikiandfriends1820
      @mikiandfriends1820 Před 26 dny +1

      What are you guys on, the gov regulations and fees are extreme, only dodgy builders can survive?

    • @condew6103
      @condew6103 Před 26 dny +5

      I have a distant relative who built sub-standard housing in an earthquake zone, and he did go to prison. Well, actually it was his father-in-law who built the substandard housing and set my relative up as a patsy. My relative knew nothing of construction, but his father-in-law made him president of his construction company! And he didn't realize anything was wrong until the SHTF and the father-in-law disappeared.

  • @vernonwhite4660
    @vernonwhite4660 Před 26 dny +274

    So the Councils that approve these developments should be held accountable!

    • @munch7676
      @munch7676 Před 26 dny +8

      Council’s didn’t build these buildings. Councils role is approving the use and design of the building appropriate in the specific zoning and area

    • @k.b4273
      @k.b4273 Před 25 dny +25

      Private Certifiers are approving these buildings, the developers are changing the plans from the original architectural drawings to make more money, the inspectors inspect as per the building regulations only 1% of the building, they are not on site enough, and they dont get paid to go the extra mile. ITS CALLED GREED and the biggest benefiter is the real estate agents that add on 10% for selling the apartment and the developer and the councils that are raking in the rates from each unit. Every step of the way its against the purchaser.

    • @colinmeehan791
      @colinmeehan791 Před 25 dny +16

      @@munch7676 Who checks the quality of workmsnship as its being built?Councils used to have inspectors to ensure quality of the build,they no longer do so,hence.dodgy builders.Councils are only interested in the Rates they collect.Councils themselves are dodgy.Who would have thought.

    • @prof.mor1arty
      @prof.mor1arty Před 25 dny +4

      how about the buyers get an expert opinion like they would with any other major purchase

    • @secondchance6603
      @secondchance6603 Před 25 dny +15

      @@prof.mor1arty How about the buildings get built to the standard they're meant to.

  • @samhunt9380
    @samhunt9380 Před 25 dny +25

    Built on the cheap but sold for gold. They ain't cheap to begin with......

  • @goatranchgaming2922
    @goatranchgaming2922 Před 25 dny +104

    Gov inspectectors need to be held accountable for not doing there job or taking bribes to approve buildings that are dangerous

    • @PsyQoBoy
      @PsyQoBoy Před 25 dny +3

      You're talking about Building Surveyors. They need to do their due diligence.

    • @Funkteon
      @Funkteon Před 24 dny

      You could write a blank cheque to a developer and tell them they can build it in whatever timeline they prefer, and you'd still get absolute junk because Australian developers and builders/tradies are clueless asshats who don't actually know HOW to build a quality structure. Approximately 100% of Australia's residential tradies would not last a week if they took a build job in Germany or Scandinavia. They'd be fired on account of spending their entire day talking utter codshit to the site manager and for taking shortcuts at every turn.

    • @xxxxxxxxx3944
      @xxxxxxxxx3944 Před 23 dny

      With the rate of housing that needs to be built and remediated, you need a whole army of construction workers and inspectors. It is NOT labour shortage, but shortage of MONEY, CAPITAL and CREDIT.

    • @peterc4632
      @peterc4632 Před 22 dny +3

      Bribes are common, poor quality buildings are the norm.

    • @colinpeacock7648
      @colinpeacock7648 Před 21 dnem

      Yes,bribery is now creeping into Australia What is happening now in this country proves it

  • @black0hat
    @black0hat Před 26 dny +137

    Two years ago I was looking for apartment because that's all I could afford and I went to a new building where an investor was willing to sell their apartment -100k. The building looked and smelled like an old hospital. I ran away and then I found an oldish 23yr old double brick building and I loved it. No issues with strata and no defects. So happy with my purchase

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny +8

      I’ve said that to my son.when he is looking to buy,go as old as possible.at least 20 years back. Pay extra for inspections and searches.

    • @sriramcan
      @sriramcan Před 25 dny +5

      old is gold

    • @markferguson7563
      @markferguson7563 Před 22 dny

      About 8 years ago, I encountered an article in the Toronto Sun, focusing on defective buildings. The person being interviewed was Prof. Ted Kesik of the John Daniels Faculty of Building Science and Architecture, at Toronto. To cut a long story short, Prof. Kesik lambasted the government of Ontario in that article for allowing developers to construct both shonky apartments, and the inevitable costs that owners will be saddled with, when they start to deteriorate.
      Apropos to that, and in order to ascertain the horrors that will eventuate with high-rise apartments, I urge you to google the CZcams, which features Prof. Kesik presaging what to expect what, in the grand scale of affairs, in the not-too-distant future, and it’s titled:
      ‘Glass Walled Condos: Short-Term Durability and Long-Term Costs’.

    • @colossus8418
      @colossus8418 Před 21 dnem

      @@user-ry6hy3vp1o yeah, be careful for asbestos and such like dangerous things.

    • @kiawang6220
      @kiawang6220 Před dnem

      @@user-ry6hy3vp1o As a retired consulting civil engineer I fully agree with your contention.

  • @Salaryman_
    @Salaryman_ Před 26 dny +81

    This is purely corporate greed, they build as cheap and quick as possible regardless of a housing crisis. Need stronger building regulations to protect buyers/owners.

    • @Paul-qq7mh
      @Paul-qq7mh Před 25 dny +1

      100%

    • @eat_ze_bugs
      @eat_ze_bugs Před 25 dny +3

      It's not the regulations, it's the engineers, architects, supervisors and labourers in this country whom many are not qualified enough to build such housing. Universities, colleges, and TAFE had been churning out mediocre graduates for decades and the results of that are now self evident. No one takes their job seriously nowadays unless they were held directly responsible for the project and its consequences. People will tolerate mediocre workmanship for as long as they are protected by the unions and can hide their mistakes within the corporate structure. No amount of red tape can prevent that complacency.

    • @petersanders2815
      @petersanders2815 Před 25 dny

      @@eat_ze_bugsah yes, developers make squillions ripping off people with defective buildings and it’s all “the unions” fault. LOL.

    • @deborahcurtis1385
      @deborahcurtis1385 Před 25 dny

      AND government to fund and build affordable housing just like Sir Robert Menzies' government did in the late 1940s - 1960s. That was the backbone of a strong society. Without affordable. housing people are desperate and at each other's throats. It's cruel and unAustralian and neoConservative. It's a long way from traditional Liberal values. To do this you must have a progressive tax system and tax the rich. This is the last thing that Liz, James and Caleb want you to understand.

    • @user-bu8lz7kz3g
      @user-bu8lz7kz3g Před 25 dny

      VAN SAN CONSTRUCTION! STAY AWAY !!!!
      DODGY BUILDS
      INDIAN BUILDER

  • @caroliner2029
    @caroliner2029 Před 26 dny +163

    It's so depressing that shoddy housing is the norm now.

    • @Leaptab
      @Leaptab Před 26 dny

      Have you seen the dickheads who are building anything? Bunch of yobbos, druggies, bogans, dead shits, shit kickers and shit munchers.

    • @mariebou6859
      @mariebou6859 Před 25 dny +3

      Yes. If I were looking for an apartment I would go for an older building.

    • @Funkteon
      @Funkteon Před 24 dny

      You could write a blank cheque to a developer and tell them they can build it in whatever timeline they prefer, and you'd still get absolute junk because Australian developers and builders/tradies are clueless asshats who don't actually know HOW to build a quality structure. Approximately 100% of Australia's residential tradies would not last a week if they took a build job in Germany or Scandinavia. They'd be fired on account of spending their entire day talking utter codshit to the site manager and for taking shortcuts at every turn.

    • @user-mg1p
      @user-mg1p Před 22 dny +2

      A lot of Australians live in tent's because of the immigration of so many..why aren't they sent to regional areas!
      The roads are clogged all day!

    • @markferguson7563
      @markferguson7563 Před 22 dny

      About 8 years ago, I encountered an article in the Toronto Sun, focusing on defective buildings. The person being interviewed was Prof. Ted Kesik of the John Daniels Faculty of Building Science and Architecture, at Toronto. To cut a long story short, Prof. Kesik lambasted the government of Ontario in that article for allowing developers to construct both shonky apartments, and the inevitable costs that owners will be saddled with, when they start to deteriorate.
      Apropos to that, and in order to ascertain the horrors that will eventuate with high-rise apartments, I urge you to google the CZcams, which features Prof. Kesik presaging what to expect what, in the grand scale of affairs, in the not-too-distant future, and it’s titled:
      ‘Glass Walled Condos: Short-Term Durability and Long-Term Costs’.

  • @trigger0403
    @trigger0403 Před 25 dny +56

    I live regional and the houses here are just as expensive as houses in the city. Were all buggered

    • @cianmoriarty7345
      @cianmoriarty7345 Před 18 dny

      Right?!
      I had to move to the western suburbs of Sydney from a lovely country town, after my scumbag land lord used the excuse of COVID to kick me out of my house because after 6 years of always paying and doing anything they asked I dared to complain about the two out of three lights that wouldn't work.
      Couldn't find anything affordable in my town!

    • @trigger0403
      @trigger0403 Před 18 dny

      @@cianmoriarty7345 I dono how were gonna survive

  • @tasmaniancaptain7768
    @tasmaniancaptain7768 Před 26 dny +48

    The old redbrickers or art deco, no lifts no pools low strata bullet proof bunkers is the way to go solid build by professional tradespeople that did apprenticeships with old school tradesmen thats the difference

    • @indiathylane2158
      @indiathylane2158 Před 25 dny +6

      Some of them are quite stylish inside, many decorative touches. And yep, built to last, quality materials all the way.

    • @mariangrimsdell1112
      @mariangrimsdell1112 Před 11 dny +1

      My friend has just bought one in Sea-forth Sydney built before WW2 , very solid, lovely high ceilings , still has original floors, can’t beat them, the walls are thick so cool in summer and with double glazing and plantation shutters you cannot hear the near by traffic.

    • @tasmaniancaptain7768
      @tasmaniancaptain7768 Před 11 dny

      @@mariangrimsdell1112 amazing place seaforth i grew up there

    • @mariangrimsdell1112
      @mariangrimsdell1112 Před 11 dny

      @@tasmaniancaptain7768 👍yes it’s very pretty but too busy for me , I like a quieter suburb without the traffic or the noise.

    • @tasmaniancaptain7768
      @tasmaniancaptain7768 Před 11 dny

      @@mariangrimsdell1112 probably balgowlah Heights quieter

  • @jpgrygus
    @jpgrygus Před 25 dny +24

    not just apartments. a friend of mine cleans houses for a living. she said the new modern houses are absolute junk made of poor quality. welcome to the new Australia.

    • @markferguson7563
      @markferguson7563 Před 22 dny

      About 8 years ago, I encountered an article in the Toronto Sun, focusing on defective buildings. The person being interviewed was Prof. Ted Kesik of the John Daniels Faculty of Building Science and Architecture, at Toronto. To cut a long story short, Prof. Kesik lambasted the government of Ontario in that article for allowing developers to construct both shonky apartments, and the inevitable costs that owners will be saddled with, when they start to deteriorate.
      Apropos to that, and in order to ascertain the horrors that will eventuate with high-rise apartments, I urge you to google the CZcams, which features Prof. Kesik presaging what to expect what, in the grand scale of affairs, in the not-too-distant future, and it’s titled:
      ‘Glass Walled Condos: Short-Term Durability and Long-Term Costs’.

    • @zoolander1721
      @zoolander1721 Před 19 dny +1

      They are, we built a new home, the wall frame in one room came loose after a few door slams lol, sold that thing when covid prices kicked in.

    • @OIllllO
      @OIllllO Před 7 dny +1

      Welcome to the USA.

  • @arthurwatts1680
    @arthurwatts1680 Před 26 dny +51

    This rant would make sense if said apartments were cheap - they are only 'cheap' when compared to houses in the same suburb. Paying 500K+ to live in a glorified hotel room is bonkers. Investors love dog boxes - or at least they did until interest rates hit the fan.

    • @jasperhorace7147
      @jasperhorace7147 Před 26 dny +1

      What happens to the price when an owner wants to sell?

    • @tomr6955
      @tomr6955 Před 25 dny +1

      If they're cheap by comparison they're cheap..

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny +1

      I love our unit, we are fortunate the finishes are well done. It’s not perfect by any means,but it’s where we are up to in our lives. And we still have the skills to do things ourselves. We are on the other side of the curve now as we age and do not miss having the upkeep and associated problems of gardens and house exterior. I’m just a little concerned that the government will find a way of folks not being able to pass their house and land onto future generations.

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny

      @@jasperhorace7147the “value” ebbs and flows as with all property types. However the increase in value is definitely not that of a house and land.

    • @bencoad8492
      @bencoad8492 Před 22 dny

      @@tomr6955 no that is cheaper not cheap....

  • @EllieMaes-Grandad
    @EllieMaes-Grandad Před 26 dny +55

    It's not about a shortage of housing but a surfeit of people . . .

    • @rennmaxbeta
      @rennmaxbeta Před 26 dny +4

      🎯

    • @martinepstein3332
      @martinepstein3332 Před 26 dny +4

      It's about a Government not running the country better, but at least you have the power to remove it at the next election

    • @jasperhorace7147
      @jasperhorace7147 Před 26 dny +8

      Well said. Wait for the accusations of xenophobia, when all this is just common sense.

    • @martinepstein3332
      @martinepstein3332 Před 25 dny +2

      @@jasperhorace7147 it's about inequality and the shortage of decent housing for all Australians irrespective of race or colour

    • @tomr6955
      @tomr6955 Před 25 dny

      Plenty of room in the country but everyone wants to be in the city

  • @MelodyMan69
    @MelodyMan69 Před 26 dny +55

    The Australian market is flooded with Asian Developers building Asian sized and design Apartments. Target is for Immigrants and Students from overseas. I spent 20+ years selling to the Contractors that construct these buildings. They are sized to be prison cells, not really an Apartment.
    This market is not interested in the Australian quarter acre block with a back yard. Australia has been changed for the worse and may never recover what these selfish vandals have done. 🇦🇺

    • @Gary-vv5gt
      @Gary-vv5gt Před 25 dny +5

      I think we all need to change that "quarter acre block with a backyard" mindset if you want to live in the city but however there needs to be extremely strict and have government based inspectors checking apartment at all stages of the build (and halted right away if issues arises) and maybe halt off the plan sales as well on top of an 25+ year warranty and your building will not pass muster if you can't guarantee that.
      Also have set areas (probs for every 5 5+ stories buildings, there an open aired area, such as a park or a plaza or shops within a reasonable size, the more stories, the bigger the space).
      Also if there issues in apartments after the building and its found the inspector or builder are lazy, the whole management and inspectors can be jailed very harshly (equal to defrauding the tax office) and pay a fine equal to all the mortgage bills of the owners and rent of tenants.
      If they use friend/family to evade the ban, their friend/family get the same punishment even tho they might have nothing to do with it.

    • @MelodyMan69
      @MelodyMan69 Před 25 dny

      @@Gary-vv5gt
      You started with "I think".
      Let me tell you what I know.
      You shit opinion about quarter block suggests you are batting for the Real Estate or Developer segment that have fckd Australia for their own personel gain.
      Since 1971, I have seen Builder/Developers that have screwed the market and Aussies. They DO NOT CARE aboyt ANYBODY and they have no INTEGRITY.
      Check all the crap tgat has gone down in ALL Australian Cities yet no effective resolution. Your a wanker when it cines to protection Australian living Standards, Building Controls, Legal Remedies that STOP the rot and lazy Politicians that DO NOT CARE.

    • @MelodyMan69
      @MelodyMan69 Před 25 dny

      @@Gary-vv5gt
      Bollocks. You have no idea. Have you worked in the Industry 50+ Years. ????
      Australia accepting Asia is our downfall. We do not NEED Asian highrise Culture with grocery store, bars and nightclubs in the same building. Deveplopers have fcked Australia

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Před 24 dny

      What about the infamous Top Place Developments ? I Don’t think the person who owned or ran the company was Asian? He done a "Skasey " and left for overseas…

    • @sueelliott4793
      @sueelliott4793 Před 23 dny +5

      I am a single person in my 50's in New Zealand and our house/apartment prices are so high that I would love to afford a prison cell apartment. As long as it has a bedroom, kitchen and dunny/shower then I am happy. It beats flatting with strangers.

  • @caroliner2029
    @caroliner2029 Před 26 dny +73

    Noise issues from having no carpet on the floors, mould from poor ventilation, smoke drift from addicts so you can't open your windows or doors to have fresh air....these things make life depressing in high density housing.

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 26 dny +5

      The same in houses. Smoke from neighbours wooden heater, barking dog next house, mould everywhere. And caaaaarpet, dirt and rotting.

    • @leeevans2929
      @leeevans2929 Před 26 dny

      @@antontsaubetter than listening to your neighbour pissing and shitting in the toilet

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 26 dny +2

      @@InfinityIsland2203 I do live in 13storey building in Wolli Creek, 500m from airport, built 2017. Yes our building has defects for $2M, from water leaks to glitchy fire alarm, but in general its good.
      Soundproofing is good because between this gyprock walls there is acoustic foam. Floors are on modern synthetic underlay which supresses noise very well. Its simple, but you cant meet all this used before 2000.

    • @tomr6955
      @tomr6955 Před 25 dny +1

      @@antontsau Lol that's delusional thinking. My neighbours have wood heaters and all neighbours have dogs but this is nothing like how bad it would be in an apartment

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny +1

      The on,y noise we get is that of more building🙄. Our ventilation is really good, and our building is very strict on noise insulation. We have lived in surbubia,regionally and now city dwelling. So far so good.

  • @EricaMTB
    @EricaMTB Před 26 dny +126

    CFMEU workers are getting their pay, that's all Labor care about.

  • @sapiens7821
    @sapiens7821 Před 25 dny +24

    Australia should go to Government Certifiers in which every stage of the build is inspected and can not go forward until it is certified and signed off. The buyer should have a break lease in which if the property is deemed unsafe they can walk away with compensation.
    The buildings should come with warranties.
    STOP builders, developers who go into liquidation or named and shamed stop operating under different names and companies

    • @TBird89
      @TBird89 Před 25 dny +7

      Nah mate, won’t change anything everyone has a price. I’ll tell you this…developers I’ve work for have picked up the tab for council inspectors before PCA come into the industry eg; brown paper bags, prepaid brothels, drugs of choice, cars for kids and the list goes on, engineers that design it should inspect and sign off on the build…. Simple.

    • @OIllllO
      @OIllllO Před 7 dny

      What @TBird89 says is true. In the US rich people have been buying their way threw red tape for decades. It does nothing but drive up the cost to the buyers.

  • @SapphireGirl3
    @SapphireGirl3 Před 26 dny +43

    Liz, James, Caleb....you are great....you all speak TRUTH.

  • @naturally2729
    @naturally2729 Před 26 dny +64

    The poor building quality of residential appartments and houses started in 2011 and continued because greedy builders and developers got away with it. Builders and developers in the residential sector have too much power and there is not enough third party supervision and certification. Masterbuilders Association is widely known to be corrupt. Deep systemic issues.

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 26 dny +3

      Poor quality started in 1788. It always was here. Buildings from 1970s which I service time after time are even the worse nightmare than modern ones. Leaking walls, bursting pipes, burning cables, cracking walls - wide choice!

    • @arohanui922
      @arohanui922 Před 26 dny

      Are you comparing old builds to new ones

    • @Paul-qq7mh
      @Paul-qq7mh Před 25 dny

      Blame the Victorian Building Authority for this they are all corrupt.

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 25 dny

      @@arohanui922 new builds use modern technology, but the same poor quality. Yes old building is old, it already collected all these bursts and cracks for 50 years of its existence, you can see them all at once, but it clearly shows the quality.

    • @buildmotosykletist1987
      @buildmotosykletist1987 Před 25 dny +1

      @@antontsau : Older buildings show their defects. Buying off a plan is a wing and a prayer. There were good quality builders back then just as there are good quality builders now but the proof is in the pudding wait until you can see what you are buying.

  • @dtang3288
    @dtang3288 Před 25 dny +21

    Corruption, corruption and more corruption!

  • @mieczyslawawozniak2305
    @mieczyslawawozniak2305 Před 21 dnem +8

    People who approve those building applications are not accountable. The moment it becomes criminal charge everything will change.

  • @russell_beddyoisken
    @russell_beddyoisken Před 26 dny +22

    There's oversight into the building trade, it's just riddled with corruption. Many of them 'sign-off' on substandard non-compliant structures , get paid, walk away...

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Před 24 dny +1

      That’s right, it’s not the people who build it are ever going to live in it or own it…

    • @LongJohnnn
      @LongJohnnn Před 22 dny +2

      Thank the Liberal government for passing those laws under the guise of making the process more efficient. Waiting for building inspections from the council was a pain in the ass but at least it wasn't riddled with corruption. I understand privatising building inspections for homes and whatnot, but doing it for large projects like apartments is a horrible idea.

  • @ausforaus7617
    @ausforaus7617 Před 26 dny +23

    Look at who is building the dodgy apartments (or the owners of the building companies), also, at the council officers who sign off on them.

  • @Azzow15
    @Azzow15 Před 26 dny +41

    What’s this rubbish about? Cheap apartments. Most apartments in Sydney are selling from $500,000-$700,000. What’s cheaper about that?

    • @sensaznal
      @sensaznal Před 26 dny +12

      Yeah and strata fee is also expensive

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 26 dny +4

      Houses in the same location are 1.5M.

    • @bullethead1953
      @bullethead1953 Před 26 dny +5

      Where’d you find that? 700k for an apparentment in Sydney is super cheap

    • @ZELJKO472
      @ZELJKO472 Před 25 dny +2

      700k for Sydney?? Where?? Out 30 kms from city for a small flat if u r lucky

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 25 dny +1

      @@ZELJKO472 1br in rockdale

  • @Nabraska49
    @Nabraska49 Před 26 dny +25

    Most stuff is cheep and nasty these days.. it’s more of the new normal system..

    • @xxxxxxxxx3944
      @xxxxxxxxx3944 Před 23 dny +2

      Cheap for them to make. Not for you to buy

  • @dumdumbrown4225
    @dumdumbrown4225 Před 25 dny +9

    These apartments are surely not cheap - and builder/construction accountability legislation in Australia is so toothless that building inspections are a scary joke (with state government funding drastically reduced) and construction companies _have almost never_ been held accountable. Housing in Oz is a joke, and the housing market is a nightmare.

  • @alexanderpepkin4110
    @alexanderpepkin4110 Před 26 dny +15

    They are not exactly “cheap” either

  • @nomyafiftyonefifty8081
    @nomyafiftyonefifty8081 Před 26 dny +17

    Only going to get worse with AnAl's push to build more housing because of the massive immigrate intake.

  • @janpolo799
    @janpolo799 Před 25 dny +4

    My 3 month renovation started with knocking down my homes back wall and that’s the last I saw of him. $20,000 in legal fees to get rid of him and 2 years later finally got another builder. Never again. Self regulated nonsense just like the nonsense government 😡

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Před 24 dny +1

      Should have named him here, then.

  • @seang2822
    @seang2822 Před 26 dny +10

    The build quality is cheap because the council’s don’t do their jobs with permits and QC… politicians are in the pockets of developers… incentivized to look the other way… not to mention the lack of good trades people because the over budget infrastructure projects and the CFMU putting pressure on costs 🤬

  • @G-Man01
    @G-Man01 Před 26 dny +14

    Chinese developers.... All money, no concern for quality.

    • @v8beamer
      @v8beamer Před 25 dny

      Building what they know…tofu dreg buildings

    • @user-un2ws5xg4i
      @user-un2ws5xg4i Před 25 dny +2

      In China developers would get big punishment ,in Australia they get rewards in milliards.

  • @daveo3122
    @daveo3122 Před 26 dny +33

    Someone been taking lessons from Chinese building companies?

    • @AndrewW2015
      @AndrewW2015 Před 26 dny +3

      Tofu builders

    • @kingcoong
      @kingcoong Před 26 dny +7

      Chinese developers are taking over Australia, so it makes sense.

  • @noni6656
    @noni6656 Před 26 dny +12

    I have house in my town in India which was build over 100 yrs and still standing firm and still in use. When I came to Australia in 2004 ,I was looking at homes which are not concrete I start calling them cardboard boxes. Wooden frame homes being build but builders don't even give 28 days to cure the concrete slab properly. No doubt cracks appear later on...I am an engineer and I build my 2 homes 1 in Melbourne and 1 in Perth , in 2010 and 2015....forced builders to wait for 28 days after pouring slab and very few cracks after all these years so far nothing major...People need to pay attention . I never buy apartment in Australia....so much shonky work

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 26 dny +1

      100 years old houses? Welcome to Balmain or so, full suburb of this crap. Some of them even marked on facade like "1916" or so. Yes they stand still and cost $2M each because of location, but its impossible to live there.

    • @noni6656
      @noni6656 Před 25 dny +2

      @@antontsau 1910 build to be precise. Bricks 4 layers, dug foundations, concrete home. Bit of work done with wiring and piping as maintaince but not 1 crack. In India homes are buid in solid bricks, concrete and dug in ground foundations for each wall rather than on concrete slab. With roof as celeing and roof are concrete. 3 story 8 bd...this is normal . Mostly like Victorian era style construction like you find in Old UK homes. Only diff is roof is flat as no snow in most of India. Positive is you have tarrece for kids to fly kites when I was a child :)) No one uses wood apart from doors n windows. Here its all wooden frame cardboard homes. Those homes last long....

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 25 dny

      @@noni6656 I am from Russia. Its where, you know, brick houses, cold winter, no money and lot of vodka. I do know what is it 50 years old brick/concrete house built cheap and for absoluyely different conditions. Yes it stands. May be no cracks apoeared and metal beams still alive. But electricity to redo completely, piping - completely replace, roof - redo or it leaks like vaterfall... No carpark, no modern fast lifts, nothing. I simply do not need such a house, it is impossible to live there.

    • @noni6656
      @noni6656 Před 20 dny

      @@antontsau labour is cheap in India. So wiring or other repairs not an issue.

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 20 dny

      @@noni6656 it not a question of labor, its just physical possibility. In 100 yo house it requires to destroy walls, open cavities, rebuild everything to install moderm infrastructure to where it was never intended. Not just repair the rotten cable for light, but make new one, by modern standards and requirements. And what will happen in the next 100 years we do not know either, so can not prepare newbuilt house to be usable in 22 century.
      Especially if it is thick brick walls, ancient floors on timbers, plastered ceilings. Of course if you have army of builders who earn 100 times less than you it is possible, but result will be, ummmm, not very appealing.

  • @judyb1643
    @judyb1643 Před 26 dny +21

    Sydney and Melbourne have signed up with the WEF to become C40 cities.
    The plan is to have up to 70% of the population living in cities.
    Melbourne has already approved planning for many high rise complexes ranging from 18 - 40 stories high.

    • @DebNewton-kh4cv
      @DebNewton-kh4cv Před 21 dnem +1

      But they can’t see what’s coming or refuse to…

  • @ivanf6938
    @ivanf6938 Před 26 dny +20

    The building industry is fairly heavily regulated in Australia compared to other countries. Including most western nations. It is our second biggest industry. If the rules and standards were followed we would have a first world gold standard product. NSW seems to have its own issues for some reason. You can glean what you like from that. But my personal experience after 40 years in the industry is the move to private certification is the biggest problem. Prior to that there was a lot of whinging about red tape and delays with councils, but never about standards. We have bred whole new industries of box tickers just in the last 20 years. Energy, public safety, bushfire, fire safety, quality, equality, disabled access, environment, first nations heritage blah blah blah. All whom have to have their bit before approval. Ticking all those boxes required by an avalanche of legislation is an onerous task and shifts the focus away from quality and the absolute basics of construction, ie: water ingress, structure etc. The second issue is "performance based solutions" which have crept into legislation. These have allowed one off "interpretations" of rules by certifiers, who in my experience still claim the rules are black and white and not up for interpretation, bizarrely. I've seen too much grey to be convinced. Interpretations vary from certifier to certifier. I've been part of large scale high quality apartment projects and know what goes into it, and what it costs. There is no apparent reason I can see for the basic defects on some Sydney apartment projects seen in the media short of corruption somewhere in the process.

    • @daleviker5884
      @daleviker5884 Před 26 dny +3

      I agree 100% about there being too much useless legislation these days and that we need to get back to basics. Houses and flats were built better forty years ago, before councils added thousands of pages to planning approvals dealing with green causes. I had reason to look at a recent Council meeting, and a large18 storey development got just over 5 minutes of discussion before being approved, and then the indigenous urban art grants scheme was talked through for 1 1/2 hours.

    • @eb2505
      @eb2505 Před 26 dny +1

      Had a concreter come to do part of my drive years ago. He was meant to put in reinforcement and had it lined up against the retaining wall. I asked him when the cement was being delivered and he said in about 30 minutes. I said to him well your reinforcement isn’t in place, how will you be ready. He said ok, then took the reinforcement and took off - never saw him again.
      He had a good relationship it seems with the official who checked his work who thought highly enough of him to not have to check what he did, but take him at his word. Fortunately Ihada builder friend, an old German, who knew what he was doing, even though concreting wasn’t what he was trained in. He put the reinforcement in place from his brother n law, also a builder. We got a Hansen to deliver the cement and he smoothed it out. Never had a problem with it, and it looks better than the rest of the drive.

    • @deborahcurtis1385
      @deborahcurtis1385 Před 25 dny +1

      You nailed it. Corruption is the issue as is self certification.

    • @PeterMcInnes-ti8ou
      @PeterMcInnes-ti8ou Před 25 dny +2

      Once saw 3 sets of footings poured but the same reo set was moved to each one for certification before each pour,guess why I didn't buy in the area

  • @Jed-yp8yg
    @Jed-yp8yg Před 22 dny +1

    My son worked as a high rise crane driver in Sydney. He told me that no one should never buy an apartment that is less than 20 to 25 years old.
    He left because he was asked to do unsafe and illegal lifts plus the workmanship was terrible and the waste was ridiculous. He couldn't be part of that anymore.

  • @sagarm7098
    @sagarm7098 Před 25 dny +13

    It’s not shoddy cheap construction in apartments but cheap shoddy construction in general. Not immigration rather an overly inflated wage paid to tradies with low productivity that is the problem.
    Any house build after 2005 has shoddy construction, mainly waterproofing issues. Bulk of the cost of building a house goes towards high cost of manpower with lower skills and productivity than their Asia Pacific cohort.
    Sub contracting trades ensures each layer taking their pound of flesh at the expense of the sucker who buys these new homes (likely immigrants who don’t seem to have issues saving up a deposit).
    ANZ standards are an indicator of poor quality, all our poor Asian neighbours have far better quality construction.
    Builders insurance is a joke!

  • @Henry1965ism
    @Henry1965ism Před 26 dny +7

    Don't these new apartments also have EV charging stations in the underground carpark? What could possibly go wrong there? 😬

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny +2

      Thank f&*k ours doesn’t. I’m not paying for other rich virtue signallers to charge the dangerous EVs.

  • @user-hl6yp4vc1l
    @user-hl6yp4vc1l Před 25 dny +4

    We need more builders and trade people from Europe

  • @Cantshred777
    @Cantshred777 Před 26 dny +4

    It's not just apartments. People are doing a poor job in terms of care taken to do something right, in general. That with companies cutting overheads for profit, leads to decline in QA practices. The old school understood what it means to make a quality product. This lot can't slap a burger together without making it look like a 3 year old made it.

  • @Le_coq_sportiff
    @Le_coq_sportiff Před 26 dny +7

    Ive worked on thousands of units on the gold coast n brisbane n they are built soooooo cheap n dodgy ,if u only knew you wouldnt pay ur hard earned for them,no way👎

  • @davidladd9544
    @davidladd9544 Před 25 dny +7

    name an shame the companies that are building these apartments/homes we need to know who's the dodgy ones that are still doing this type of crappy work!!

    • @fionaforward3358
      @fionaforward3358 Před 11 dny +1

      Developers advertise a reputable builder when selling these units off plan.Then,they quietly bring in unqualified workers from China to build the project.This is what has happened in West Melbourne in a number of big complexes there.Absolute rubbish buildings.

  • @camwells9726
    @camwells9726 Před 26 dny +11

    I’m early 60s and can remember as a kid watching American tv , and you had all these people in various shows living in high rise apartments and it seemed like another planet compared to us living on our suburban quarter acre blocks .
    And here we are

    • @markferguson7563
      @markferguson7563 Před 22 dny

      About 8 years ago, I encountered an article in the Toronto Sun, focusing on defective buildings. The person being interviewed was Prof. Ted Kesik of the John Daniels Faculty of Building Science and Architecture, at Toronto. To cut a long story short, Prof. Kesik lambasted the government of Ontario in that article for allowing developers to construct both shonky apartments, and the inevitable costs that owners will be saddled with, when they start to deteriorate.
      Apropos to that, and in order to ascertain the horrors that will eventuate with high-rise apartments, I urge you to google the CZcams, which features Prof. Kesik presaging what to expect what, in the grand scale of affairs, in the not-too-distant future, and it’s titled:
      ‘Glass Walled Condos: Short-Term Durability and Long-Term Costs’.

  • @lisadolan689
    @lisadolan689 Před 26 dny +8

    The assessor’s NEED to be independent, work in 3’s on site, and have no communication with the developer.

    • @Gary-vv5gt
      @Gary-vv5gt Před 25 dny

      Yep i agree and if issues arises due to the fault of the builder and assessors passed, both the manager of the site and assessors are punished the same way, can range from jail, up to paying the full 30 years or whatnot mortgages of the owners for each unit....
      Also assessors needs to go on site at all stages of the build, have work in 3's like you said (preferably from different areas or even states) and if you want to become an assessors, you gotta cut all ties with the developers and you won't be able to inspect the site if is being developed by your old workplace.

  • @HouseWinchester1874
    @HouseWinchester1874 Před 26 dny +57

    What’s wrong with having a nice small population…
    Why do we have to have such large populations of humans in each country.
    Australia too too over populated.

    • @user-jw9lq5ib6g
      @user-jw9lq5ib6g Před 26 dny

      yea... all the POMS... living on stolen land.. f-off.. to the fields of Englandershire.. these rotten cabbages won't roll home on their own

    • @bradsharpe9413
      @bradsharpe9413 Před 26 dny

      It seems like people enjoy having sex and children.

    • @bettinafullerton6452
      @bettinafullerton6452 Před 26 dny +9

      Totally agree with you.

    • @Maxkil
      @Maxkil Před 26 dny +3

      whos going to deliver your food and make you a latte

    • @Leaptab
      @Leaptab Před 26 dny

      Because we are a dumb country that relies on dugging stuff up and importing a new tax base to pay for things. We dont make anything and you can only sell so many overpriced cups of coffee.

  • @johnschuring5726
    @johnschuring5726 Před 26 dny +30

    Please remind me to never to move to Australia.

    • @MaTtRoSiTy
      @MaTtRoSiTy Před 26 dny +17

      Please don't, we already have enough immigrants here

    • @dickdiver9614
      @dickdiver9614 Před 26 dny +1

      ​@MaTtRoSiTy The aborigines thought the same at one time too 😂

    • @tamarawest6203
      @tamarawest6203 Před 26 dny

      I don't know why you would want to? Don't forget how our human rights were confiscated from us during the pandemic? The worst in the world. Stay well away!

    • @walterbolter4320
      @walterbolter4320 Před 26 dny +4

      Then move to the Pacific Group of Island chain, & marry-into a Chief’s family. That’s the only way you can own property-there. More discriminatory than you can imagine.

    • @antontsau
      @antontsau Před 26 dny

      Do not come, everything is very bad here! (unofficial slogan of Russian Au-immigration website)

  • @justme.9711
    @justme.9711 Před 21 dnem +2

    Who are the building inspectors giving them a tick?

  • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
    @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny +3

    Our strata has jumped $600 per quarter in the four years we have been here. Our building came out of guarantee period two years ago. The cladding laws have been changed every two years for the past eight years. So there’s another special levy waiting to happen. We’ve avoided it thus far . This is where we could afford and ticked the most boxes. It’s close to the city for work and play and atm we all just keep to ourselves.

  • @Cardifftoyboy1
    @Cardifftoyboy1 Před 26 dny +6

    A surveyor told me years ago to only buy traditional brick with traditional slate roofs on good ground with traditional deep foundations. I have always taken his advice and never had the problems the people buying the tiki taki are.

  • @theresaotoole9141
    @theresaotoole9141 Před 19 dny +2

    The argument that because of imported population explosion plus everyone wants to live in a city is the reason for poorly built shoddy defective buildings is false - these are are separate issues. First, there is no reason why a multi storey building can't be built without serious defect. As a Chartered Structural Engineer with over 40 years experience I know that this is so. As a modern society we have the technical expertise to do this, supported by good building standards, rules and regulations. The real problem for these defective buildings result from corruption of the building system processes. Building developers (not all, but a lot) bribe and bully those in regulatory oversight to bend or ignore the rules, use cheap imported unproven building material, used inexperience staff, ignore or fail to provide proper building supervision during construction, take unwise shortcuts - all to enhance profits. The whole building process in Australia is rotten to the core and needs to be clean out and overhauled.

  • @DavdMar
    @DavdMar Před 26 dny +9

    Buy one built 25 years ago when they were built bigger and better.
    I’ll never own another one with $10k a year in owners Corp fees who don’t do anything when there’s a problem

    • @daleviker5884
      @daleviker5884 Před 26 dny +1

      Why not join the Owners Committee then and change things? I'm on the OC in my building and it is a thankless task.

    • @DavdMar
      @DavdMar Před 26 dny +3

      @@daleviker5884 Yeah no thanks. It was a boys club and I couldn’t think of a worse way to spend my time. Preferred to sell and move in to a house I owned nearby

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Před 24 dny

      The thing is, some developers are strata corporations as well . Pardon the pun, but it’s all becoming vertically integrated…when you move into one of these apartments, you have to " hire" the loading dock at $120 per day, just to move in.Same when moving out. That’s just Bull 💩.

    • @DavdMar
      @DavdMar Před 24 dny +1

      @@paulsz6194 To have to ‘hire’ something you own is ridiculous. Reserve it sure but pay to use something you own is just them laughing at you. Also if you want to sue the OC over building defects such as water through your ceiling from a skylight, you are basically suing yourself. It’s all just stupid it hurts my brain. Then a Karen walks in and your head explodes

  • @mollynorth5627
    @mollynorth5627 Před 26 dny +7

    That's what happens when you remove tech schools.

    • @ZELJKO472
      @ZELJKO472 Před 25 dny +4

      That is true too. Young now want to study woke and social justice. Don't build or innovate, be a social justice warrior and color your hair orange or green

  • @rodneywatson7855
    @rodneywatson7855 Před 26 dny +20

    Years ago I was an electrician working on a large block of units and shops up at Noosa, and one day I nonchalantly ran my fingernail across the dry mortar in between 2 concrete blocks in an outer wall while I was on my mobile, and the mortar just fell on the floor and it seemed like the brickies forgot to add the lime and cement. I tried a few other places on the wall and it was all the same. I drive past this place every now and again and wonder how it's still standing, but must be just good luck as there's nothing much else keeping it up.

  • @vincentcacciola7161
    @vincentcacciola7161 Před 26 dny +12

    These apartment are terribly built

    • @deborahcurtis1385
      @deborahcurtis1385 Před 25 dny +2

      Yes but the brochures are shiny, and the interior designer convinces you that you can live in a minimal way with no storage!

  • @ausbare140
    @ausbare140 Před 25 dny +4

    When people in power never suffer things will not change.
    Like with all things follow the money.
    If CEO could go to jail things might change.

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Před 24 dny

      They just leave the country, and do a Skasey …

  • @user-hb6ti6mt7i
    @user-hb6ti6mt7i Před 25 dny +2

    The report isn't new, from 2002 to 2018 during the housing boom years unqualified tradesman and dodgy Indian engineers from overseas built them, 60 minutes AU warned if this in 2019 not to buy a unit or house built after 2002!

  • @Prognosis__
    @Prognosis__ Před 26 dny +18

    A lot of cowboys out there

    • @terencejay8845
      @terencejay8845 Před 26 dny +1

      Interesting watching this chap, with a large crack in the brickwork behind him.

    • @David_Camerwrongun
      @David_Camerwrongun Před 26 dny +3

      Anyone can get into construction but it doesn't make them any good at it

    • @lappo2534
      @lappo2534 Před 26 dny +1

      Especially in our grubberment

    • @markferguson7563
      @markferguson7563 Před 22 dny

      About 8 years ago, I encountered an article in the Toronto Sun, focusing on defective buildings. The person being interviewed was Prof. Ted Kesik of the John Daniels Faculty of Building Science and Architecture, at Toronto. To cut a long story short, Prof. Kesik lambasted the government of Ontario in that article for allowing developers to construct both shonky apartments, and the inevitable costs that owners will be saddled with, when they start to deteriorate.
      Apropos to that, and in order to ascertain the horrors that will eventuate with high-rise apartments, I urge you to google the CZcams, which features Prof. Kesik presaging what to expect what, in the grand scale of affairs, in the not-too-distant future, and it’s titled:
      ‘Glass Walled Condos: Short-Term Durability and Long-Term Costs’.

  • @heytam7162
    @heytam7162 Před 26 dny +23

    … and Australia wants to build a Nuclear Reactor , can’t build hospitals or apartments properly… make it make sense !

    • @ross4970
      @ross4970 Před 25 dny +4

      Two different things entirely.

    • @rawnature8148
      @rawnature8148 Před 25 dny +1

      ​@@ross4970correct, Australia doesn't have the trained work force to make a nuclear reactor....

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny

      Hah love it! After hearing all the problems of a brand new hospital just handed over recently, the thought of a nuclear reactor is just plain scary.

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Před 24 dny

      @@rawnature8148Just like Australia doesn’t have a trained workforce to build decent submarines….That’s why were buying the next generation from a country who has the expretise in this. Same thing goes with Nuclear reactors & Nuclear Power stations. You do know we have a Nuclear reactor in Lucas Heights, NSW . Right?? Who do you think built that? A Local home builder?? 🤔

    • @rawnature8148
      @rawnature8148 Před 24 dny

      @@paulsz6194 when was Lucas built? I know people who work there and their doctorates make them a homer Simpson level employee.

  • @peterso5669
    @peterso5669 Před 22 dny +1

    Before you buy any apartments off the plan , you must do research on the developer and the builder for their credibility!

  • @troubleabout5137
    @troubleabout5137 Před 26 dny +9

    There are no houses out in the country available to rent

  • @jpgrygus
    @jpgrygus Před 25 dny +2

    builders and tradies obviously dont take pride in their work. and they demand premium fees.

  • @user-fr5nm1yx8o
    @user-fr5nm1yx8o Před 26 dny +3

    Well thats what you get when builders are allowed to pass their own work .

  • @peterfmodel
    @peterfmodel Před 21 dnem +1

    Having lived in apartments in Hong Kong, Tokyo, Seoul, Beijing and Singapore i have to say most modern apartment in Sydney are very flimsy. Apartments built in Sydney prior to 1996 seem good, they are normally full brick and concrete and all internal walls are brick, but the windows are very flimsy. I was told the main reason for this was the federal government rules changes in 1986 and then followed by the NSW state government rules changes in 1996. If i had to buy an apartment i think i would stay with those built prior to 2000.

  • @user-zh5ri2fx8t
    @user-zh5ri2fx8t Před 26 dny +7

    Old news. Those who were awake knew all this years ago. Wakie, wakie.

  • @leevan2332
    @leevan2332 Před 25 dny +3

    Its not just apartments its homes as well...I had a person come to see my home as it was cracking...We are in Victoria...The guy told us never by a new home especially in Melbourne....Houses are done on the cheap with a certain culture doing the foundational slabs all wrong and building inspectors are not doing their jobs...He said that they are making houses to last 10 years then the trouble all starts...Governmental standards have dropped and lets face it the government are good for nothing when it comes to standards in most of government departments...Im not talking about the honest people working its policies...Politicians do not work for the people any longer and most dont care!

    • @markferguson7563
      @markferguson7563 Před 22 dny

      About 8 years ago, I encountered an article in the Toronto Sun, focusing on defective buildings. The person being interviewed was Prof. Ted Kesik of the John Daniels Faculty of Building Science and Architecture, at Toronto. To cut a long story short, Prof. Kesik lambasted the government of Ontario in that article for allowing developers to construct both shonky apartments, and the inevitable costs that owners will be saddled with, when they start to deteriorate.
      Apropos to that, and in order to ascertain the horrors that will eventuate with high-rise apartments, I urge you to google the CZcams, which features Prof. Kesik presaging what to expect what, in the grand scale of affairs, in the not-too-distant future, and it’s titled:
      ‘Glass Walled Condos: Short-Term Durability and Long-Term Costs’.

    • @fionaforward3358
      @fionaforward3358 Před 13 dny

      I would support all you say.Metricon has built many rubbish houses in outer Melbourne.

  • @anitacohen8753
    @anitacohen8753 Před 25 dny +3

    Quality? The only country where you pay the same amount for a house as a small flat!!!!!

    • @markferguson7563
      @markferguson7563 Před 22 dny

      About 8 years ago, I encountered an article in the Toronto Sun, focusing on defective buildings. The person being interviewed was Prof. Ted Kesik of the John Daniels Faculty of Building Science and Architecture, at Toronto. To cut a long story short, Prof. Kesik lambasted the government of Ontario in that article for allowing developers to construct both shonky apartments, and the inevitable costs that owners will be saddled with, when they start to deteriorate.
      Apropos to that, and in order to ascertain the horrors that will eventuate with high-rise apartments, I urge you to google the CZcams, which features Prof. Kesik presaging what to expect what, in the grand scale of affairs, in the not-too-distant future, and it’s titled:
      ‘Glass Walled Condos: Short-Term Durability and Long-Term Costs’.

  • @gregculverwell
    @gregculverwell Před 26 dny +7

    Tofu dregs construction came to Australia a long time ago.

  • @brettleonard8602
    @brettleonard8602 Před 25 dny +2

    Screw owning a unit... 100% paid for ,ohh what I still have to pay an amount equal to rent 10 years ago in strata fees.

  • @Nanobits
    @Nanobits Před 26 dny +9

    I went to Mexico once and found that they build all their stuff in concrete and brick and with serious internal fortification. Give it to the Mexicans to build homes that will last for 100yrs plus, they got families living in these homes that have been in the family for centuries.

    • @subatomic10
      @subatomic10 Před 12 dny

      Probably to protect themselves from being peppered with bullets

  • @rogermouton2273
    @rogermouton2273 Před 26 dny +3

    In an apartment block in Melbourne that's probably about 15 yo; bought mine about 6 years ago. Pretty much no issues related to poor quality construction. More than big enough for me, 10 minute walk to the office. Worked out OK.

    • @user-gs3tq6bx2u
      @user-gs3tq6bx2u Před 22 dny +1

      Yes, there are good builders building decent quality apartment highrise buildings out there but the problem is that with the news focusing on all those shoddy apartments, the price for all apartments suffer.

    • @rogermouton2273
      @rogermouton2273 Před 22 dny

      @@user-gs3tq6bx2u Hmmm, but isn't it the case that, if an apartment is say, over 15 yo, and buyers can see that it's showing no signs of construction issues, then the price should not suffer?

  • @NinjaKuma
    @NinjaKuma Před 26 dny +17

    This is why you buy existing builds with no history of defects... lol

  • @advanceaustralia4861
    @advanceaustralia4861 Před 26 dny +7

    2.8m temp visa people live in Australia.

    • @clydesimpson1462
      @clydesimpson1462 Před 25 dny

      Australia needs more Uber Drivers.

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Před 24 dny +1

      @@clydesimpson1462really, then send them to Alice Springs, lol…

  • @Adzer2k10
    @Adzer2k10 Před 19 dny +1

    Building services engineer here.
    Most residential projects being built are being pushed through too quick before designs can be properly finalised and coordinated to meet unrealistic deadline expectations of developers and then once the designs are complete and signed off, a builder and sub contractors come along and cut off all the meat to make a quick buck.
    The whole thing is a race to the bottom line to turn as much profit as possible.
    My advice, don't but anything that's been built in, at least, the last 15 years.

    • @Adzer2k10
      @Adzer2k10 Před 19 dny

      And never, ever buy off plan.
      Most of the plans the developers and real estate leeches are using to sell to you haven't even been through first pass designs to consider services. News flash, services for example take up space and many architects never properly consider them on their initial plans.

  • @willsshepherd2976
    @willsshepherd2976 Před 20 dny +1

    Polystyrene and silicone glue is used to replace wood, brick and tile cheating as much as possible. I’ll be considering you have built without a cement slab just polystyrene on the floor

  • @jolla9963
    @jolla9963 Před 23 dny +1

    There is oversight, it just goes blind at the first brown paper bag passed from citizen A to politician B.
    Corruption is rife within councils aswell as state and federal politics.

  • @just.jules.973
    @just.jules.973 Před 23 dny +2

    I dont think its because we are desperate on where to live, blame the corruption of developers from building substandard residential and commercial property at sky high prices. blame the politicians who are not making proper laws to ensure issues like these are curbed.

  • @caroliner2029
    @caroliner2029 Před 26 dny +5

    They're done on the shonk.
    Dodgy Brothers Builders.

  • @stevejones9062
    @stevejones9062 Před 25 dny +2

    The entire building industry need a shake up, developers need to keep detailed records of who did what and when for at least a decade and tradies should have their qualification cancelled (not suspended) if it is found they have done substandard work. A second offence should result in jail time for fraud.

    • @user-gs3tq6bx2u
      @user-gs3tq6bx2u Před 22 dny

      What happens is that these shoddy builders form a new company with people other than themselves as the directors, build the high rise, cut corners and use low quality materials, then when the building is sold and completed, they dissolve the company, send it into bankruptcy ...this way you can't successfully sue a company that is an empty shell on paper with company owner who is some fall guy with zero assets. The actual guy with money forms a new company, signs up a street person to be the director ..rinse and repeat.

  • @heyguyswhatshappening6210

    I will never live in an apartment. Body corporate goes up every year and if there is a maintenance issue guess what ? You have to pay for it yourself. Stuff that.

  • @kellywiewall4928
    @kellywiewall4928 Před 26 dny +3

    I've worked at a lot of construction sites in Ohio an inspector's come in every stage you can only put drywall on one side of a wall until it gets inspected

  • @lynndonharnell422
    @lynndonharnell422 Před 25 dny +1

    I know of 1 complex on Gold Coast where they didn't put grease on lift cables. One block from the ocean!! Whole lot had to be replaced after less than 2 years old.

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny +1

      It would’ve been within the building guarantee period. The builder would have worn that.

  • @antontsau
    @antontsau Před 26 dny +2

    90% of houses have not only defects, but inevitable problems. Several channels like "home inspections" are full of it fun. So no choice at all.

  • @leroyybrown
    @leroyybrown Před 25 dny +1

    Why are the commercial skyscrapers built in the CBD’s for office or hotels not affected as badly? Why don’t the buyers off the plan privately employee their own engineers and inspectors?

  • @evancooper7336
    @evancooper7336 Před 26 dny +1

    I must admit coming from nz, I found the building quality terrible here in Sydney compared to back home. Makes me very nervous to buy an apartment.

  • @eat_ze_bugs
    @eat_ze_bugs Před 25 dny +1

    Average priced housing with shoddy build quality is what the third world commonly faces. Australia is becoming just that.

  • @ewtwetrwerwteet
    @ewtwetrwerwteet Před 25 dny +3

    I'm better off on the dole + rent assistance, if i'm going to live in an apartment with defects, at least someone else can pay .

    • @user-ry6hy3vp1o
      @user-ry6hy3vp1o Před 25 dny

      Oh there’s that special victim mentality that has poisoned our society.you go ahead and live off the public purse then. Sadly you’ll never know what self satisfaction is.

  • @andrew6526
    @andrew6526 Před 26 dny +8

    Humans living like Battery hens, sad really on both accounts.

  • @RoyceAlcorn
    @RoyceAlcorn Před 21 dnem

    I cant remember what artist said, but looking at the old buildings in New York he said "Humans have lost the capacity and roman civic pride to build art"

  • @owainjohns2815
    @owainjohns2815 Před 26 dny +8

    asymmetric warfare, wake up...

  • @robobop3721
    @robobop3721 Před 20 dny

    I heard in the 90s the laws changed from the inspector being appointed by the council to being appointed by the developer? If thats the case, what do you think would happen? And in the rare case the builder is held liable then declare bankruptcy and start a new business

  • @CLH-of5rr
    @CLH-of5rr Před 26 dny +2

    Just like state housing.

  • @user-hl6yp4vc1l
    @user-hl6yp4vc1l Před 25 dny +1

    We need more building inspectors

  • @caravanlifenz
    @caravanlifenz Před 21 dnem

    Every Australian builder I've met talks about the awful quality of Aussie houses and apartments. And they say health and safety practices are a problem too - a lot of Aussie tradies are getting injured building these rushed projects.

  • @wendychan6679
    @wendychan6679 Před 21 dnem

    I know someone who was having a whinge because she works for a developer and that developer is now in court because of a dodgy building they made. The owners of that building complained to them on numerous occasions but the faults remain so they sued them. I was not the least bit sympathetic to this person as these problems are far too common. This really needs to be sorted out. It is just too easy to build a building (unit etc) and have to owner pay for all the repairs.

  • @Matto_Harvo
    @Matto_Harvo Před 24 dny +2

    Build up more. The people in rural areas don't want city people

  • @YobboLivesMatter
    @YobboLivesMatter Před 25 dny +2

    From all the Australians across the land living in tents or old station wagons or vans or under bridges and getting fined by sadistic council rangers for sleeping ion a public place, we have four short words. Nana, Nana, Nah, and Naah.

  • @mikedelaney007
    @mikedelaney007 Před 26 dny +5

    They don't have inspections along the way as they build?

    • @Antonio-uw6ue
      @Antonio-uw6ue Před 26 dny

      You dint look under the table before inspection time,table was in the right place,now you know

    • @Rexhunterj
      @Rexhunterj Před 25 dny

      I lived in south brisbane and I doubt the inspections are legitimate. While living there the owners and managers never once conducted an inspection on the apartment despite it being in the agreement that they would do so at their leisure, unannounced.
      I was sharing a two bedroom apartment with a foreigner who was letting their side turn to rot.

    • @mikedelaney007
      @mikedelaney007 Před 25 dny

      @@Rexhunterj Holy crap. Everything is inspected here along the way of a build. I'm sure there is some backscratching along the way. But lots of inspection from many different places and for many different reasons.

  • @rebekahsprlyan6982
    @rebekahsprlyan6982 Před 21 dnem

    A lot of these buildings aren’t even being built to code according to an inspector I have watched on CZcams. It’s cost cutting and disgusting.

  • @chottobit8148
    @chottobit8148 Před 22 dny

    Private Certifiers should be under greater regulations. Seems practically any ex builder can hold a private certifier certificate. We had our house certified without any actual visit to the premises. Who is looking over the shoulder of private certifiers?