Enter your email Address

LookUpStrata

Strata Information Leading to Open Discussion

advert Lannock strata finance
Australia's Top Property Blog Dedicated to Strata Living
  • Home
  • What is strata?
    • Strata Legislation – Rules and ByLaws
    • What is Strata?
    • Glossary of NSW Strata Terms and Jargon
    • Understand Strata Management with this Five-Minute Guide
    • Cracking the Strata Fees Code
    • Strata Finance
  • Strata Topics
    • Strata Information By State
      • New South Wales
      • Queensland
      • Victoria
      • Australian Capital Territory
      • South Australia
      • Tasmania
      • Western Australia
      • Northern Territory
    • Strata Information By Topic
      • By-Laws & Legislation
      • Smoking
      • Parking
      • Noise & Neighbours
      • Insurance
      • Pets
      • Your Levies
      • New Law Reform
      • Maintenance & Common Property
      • Committee Concerns
      • NBN & Telecommunications
      • Building Defects
      • Renting / Selling / Buying Property
      • Strata Managers
      • Building Managers & Caretakers
      • Strata Plan / Strata Inspection Report
      • Apartment Living Sustainability
    • Strata Webinars
      • NSW Strata Webinars
      • QLD Strata Webinars
      • VIC Strata Webinars
      • ACT Strata Webinars
      • SA Strata Webinars
      • WA Strata Webinars
    • Upcoming and FREE Strata Events
  • Blog
    • Newsletter Archives
  • The Strata Magazine
    • The NSW Strata Magazine
    • The QLD Strata Magazine
    • The VIC Strata Magazine
    • The WA Strata Magazine
  • Advertise With Us
    • Site Sponsors
  • About Us
    • Testimonials for LookUpStrata
  • Help
    • Ask A Strata Question
    • Q&As – about the LookUpStrata site
    • Sitemap
Home » Maintenance & Common Property » Maintenance & Common Property QLD » QLD: Garbage Chutes Not as Insignificant as They Seem

QLD: Garbage Chutes Not as Insignificant as They Seem

Published April 30, 2021 By The LookUpStrata Team 1 Comment Last Updated May 15, 2021

Share with your strata community

171 shares
  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

This article about the significance of garbage chutes in strata properties has been supplied by Bradley van Xanten, UOAQ President.

CLICK HERE TO BE NOTIFIED WHEN WE PUBLISH CONTENT TO THE SITE

Often it’s the little things that get overlooked

We call our schemes ‘complexes’ because they are complex … and there is a lot for the committee to be aware of and keep on top of. It is so easy for things to slip below the radar. Especially things as seemingly mundane and insignificant as garbage chutes and their component parts.

A UOAQ member recently alerted us to a long-standing fire-safety risk at his 16-storied complex on the Sunshine Coast. The risk involved their garbage chutes – in particular, the cute little hopper doors opening into the garbage chute from each floor. A number were not working properly. Worse still, they had been like this for years.

Seemingly, no one realised that a garbage hopper door which does not self-close and self-latch becomes a fire hazard when left open. It was seen as just another low-level maintenance issue in an ageing building already troubled by mounting costs.

The risk was only identified when a comprehensive fire-safety inspection followed a Show Cause Notice from their local council about, amongst other things, unauthorised removal of fire doors from the bin room in the basement.

This news about the hoppers gave us pause for thought, mainly because bin rooms, garbage chutes, and their hopper doors are not something we have ever given much thought to…and we suspect that we are not the only ones unaware of their potential as fire hazards.

So we talked to the experts

The UOAQ approached Queensland Fire and Emergency Services (QFES) who confirmed there are rules – very important rules – about openings into garbage chutes.

QFES explained that In the event of fire, the chute can act as a chimney rising all the way from the bin room right up to the top floor. Any vertical shaft within a building is a fire hazard in itself, but worsened – in the case of garbage chutes – by fuelling it with combustible material, ie your garbage.

If the hopper door on your floor is open, the risk of fire and/or toxic fumes finding their way out from the chute and onto the level where you live would be obvious.

Think Grenfell, only this time it’s already inside your building.

Hence the rules in:

  • Building Code of Australia (BCA) C3.13: eg the hoppers themselves must be non-combustible; and
  • AS/NZS 1905.1:1997: Components for the protection of openings in fire-resistant walls: eg the door-sets in the hoppers must be self-closing and self-latching.

These self-activating safeguards are incorporated into the original build, so that you do not have to worry about closing the hoppers yourself. And therein lies the problem for the body corporate’s committee, ie ensuring the hoppers continue working properly. Especially when the building is ageing and things start stopping, eg little things like the self-closing and self-latching components of those hopper doors out there in your foyer.

We suspect that a lot of owners, including committees, are unaware of the importance of these hoppers and their significance for fire safety – and consequently do not appreciate the risk to:

  1. their property,
  2. their lives, and,
  3. their strata insurance cover if damage arises from a malfunctioning hopper.

The Queensland Fire and Emergency Service (QFES) advises all committees to ensure that the hopper doors opening into the garbage chute are regularly inspected and fully functional.

Bradley van Xanten
UOAQ President
Unit Owners Association of Queensland (UOAQ)
Facebook page

This post appears in Strata News #472.

Have a question about the significance of garbage chutes in strata properties or something to add to the article? Leave a comment below.

Embed

Read next:

  • QLD: Q&A Who Pays for Repairs due to Common Property Defects Like a Leak?
  • QLD: Q&A Who is Responsible for Maintenance of My Apartment Balcony?

This article has been republished with permission from the author and first appeared on the UOAQ website.

Visit Maintenance and Common Property OR Strata Legislation Queensland

Looking for strata information concerning your state? For state-specific strata information, try here.

After a free PDF of this article? Log into your existing LookUpStrata Account to download the printable file. Not a member? Simple – join for free on our Registration page.

Share with your strata community

171 shares
  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

Comments

  1. Robin Steer says

    May 25, 2023 at 7:06 am

    This is an excellent article that should go national as it relates to the National Construction Code.
    One should google the Hartford Hospital Fire in 1966 where a bin chute did catch fire and a hopper door flew open on the 9 th floor resulting in 16 deaths and changes to building standards we see today.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search For Strata Articles

  • Advert Stratabox
  • StrataBox Advert
Subscribe Newsletter

TESTIMONIALS

"LookUpStrata should be compulsory reading for every member of a Body Corporate Committee. It provides the most understandable answers to all the common (and uncommon) questions that vex Body Corporates everywhere. Too often Committee members do not understand what Body Corporates are legally able to do and not do. LookUpStrata helps educate everybody living in a Body Corporate environment for free." John, Lot Owner

"It's the best and most professional body corporate information source a strata manager could have! Thanks to the whole team!" MQ, Strata Manager

"I like reading all the relevant articles on important issues on Strata living that the LookUpStrata Newsletter always effectively successfully covers"
Carole, Lot Owner

"Strata is so confusing and your newsletters and website are my go-to to get my questions answered. It has helped me out so many times and is a fabulous knowledge hub." Izzy, Lot Owner

Quick Login

Log In
Register Lost Password

Categories

  • Contact a Strata Specialist on the LookUpStrata Directory
  • Ask Us A Strata Question
  • New South Wales
  • Queensland
  • Victoria
  • Australian Capital Territory
  • South Australia
  • Tasmania
  • Western Australia
  • Northern Territory
  • ByLaws & Legislation
  • Smoking
  • Parking
  • Noise & Neighbours
  • Insurance
  • Pets
  • Levies
  • Law Reform
  • Maintenance & Common Property
  • Committee Concerns
  • NBN & Telecommunications
  • Building Defects
  • Renting / Selling / Buying
  • Strata Managers
  • Building Managers and Caretakers
  • Strata Reports / Plans
  • Sustainability

Recent Comments

  • Bronwyn on QLD: Q&A Body Corporate Spending Without Required Approvals
  • tyson dsylva on SA: Q&A Strata Voting Rules, Majority Votes and Proxies
  • Nikki Jovicic on Queensland Body Corporate Commissioner: Information, community education and conciliation at BCCM
  • Marino Tagliapietra on Queensland Body Corporate Commissioner: Information, community education and conciliation at BCCM
  • William on SA: Q&A Strata Voting Rules, Majority Votes and Proxies
  • Norman Reid on VIC: Q&A Signing a Contract on Behalf of the Owners Corporation
  • Nikki Jovicic on WA: Q&A Can we stop neighbour from smoking on the apartment balcony?
  • Dean on WA: Q&A Can we stop neighbour from smoking on the apartment balcony?
  • Nikki Jovicic on QLD: Body corporate communications
  • Liza Admin on QLD: A recent adjudication order highlighting body corporate general meetings

WEBSITE INFORMATION

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions of Use
  • Terms of Use for Comments and Community Discussion
  • Advertising Disclosure
  • Sitemap

SCA Membership

SCA WA Membership

ASK A STRATA QUESTION

Disclaimer

The opinions and/or views expressed on the LookUpStrata site, including, but not limited to, our blogs and comments, represent the thoughts of individual bloggers and our online communities, and not those necessarily of LookUpStrata Pty Ltd. In all instances, information should not be taken as advice and independent legal advice should be consulted.

CONTACT US VIA EMAIL

Copyright © 2025 · LookUpStrata ® Pty Ltd · All rights reserved