We explain how to meet your legal obligations under the Building Act 1993 and keep your neighbour safe while your building project progresses.
We are Underpinning Melbourne — Structural Preservation Specialists. We prioritise safety, structural integrity and VBA‑compliant certification. Our team offers clear, engineering-led advice so you can act with confidence.
Part 7 of the Act sets out when adjoining-site measures are required and how the Relevant Building Surveyor decides. We simplify notice steps, timing and insurance so you know what to expect.
Call Chris: 1300 970 930 or Email Chris: chris@underpinning-melbourne.com.au. For a quick cost check, see our underpinning cost calculator.
Key Takeaways
- We guide you through notice periods, Forms 6–8 and RBS determinations.
- Learn who pays, what insurance is needed and when entry is allowed.
- Our engineers handle condition surveys and agreed measures.
- We use council‑compliant methods and provide fixed‑price quotes.
- Phone or email us for a free, no‑obligation structural assessment.
Understanding protection works adjoining property victoria
This section clarifies when nearby land is at real risk from your building activity and what engineering options address that risk.
What “adjoining property” means under the Building Act 1993:
The Act defines adjoining property broadly. It covers any land, streets, lanes, footpaths and rights of way that may be at risk of significant damage from your building work. That definition exists to prevent avoidable structural harm.
Examples of common measures
- Underpinning adjoining footings to keep foundations stable.
- Erecting retaining walls where excavation could cause movement.
- Installing overhead gantries to shield facades and footpaths.
These methods can be temporary or permanent. We design solutions to suit Melbourne soil and groundwater. Our engineers pick options that limit movement and protect nearby facades and footings.
We document conditions before any intrusive activity with a dilapidation report. This separates pre‑existing damage from changes caused by proposed works.
Ask which option suits your site. Call Chris: 1300 970 930 or Email Chris: chris@underpinning-melbourne.com.au.

When protection works are required and who decides
When your plan includes excavation or work close to a neighbour, a relevant building surveyor will assess the risk and decide if formal measures are needed. This review happens at the permit stage and forms part of the building permit check.
Common triggers include deep excavations, boundary walls, underpinning and any need to enter nearby land for access. The relevant building surveyor inspects the permit documentation and flags triggers early.
- The relevant building surveyor reviews plans during the permit stage.
- They decide if protection works are necessary to shield nearby structures.
- Access over a fence or into a laneway usually activates the regime.
By law, the owner must serve a protection works notice if measures are needed. The adjoining owner has 14 days to reply in writing. If they do not reply, consent is deemed agreed proposed and the project can proceed.
If the neighbour objects, the relevant building surveyor makes a determination under the Building Act 1993. We prepare clear engineering reports and drawings to speed that decision and reduce dispute risk.
| Trigger | Who decides | Typical outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Deep excavation near a boundary | Relevant building surveyor | Issue notice; require engineering design |
| Underpinning adjacent footings | Relevant building surveyor | Serve protection works notice; neighbour reply 14 days |
| Access onto neighbouring land | Relevant building surveyor | Consent required or RBS determination |
| Boundary wall alterations | Relevant building surveyor | Clarify scope; engineer detail requested |
How to follow the Protection Works Notice process step by step
Follow a simple sequence of forms and surveys to reduce delay and avoid disputes. We make the process clear and manage the documentation for you.
Serving notices: Form 6, Form 7 and the 14‑day response (Form 8)
Serve Form 6 to introduce why protection is required. Then serve Form 7 with owner details, proposed building works, proposed protection works and supporting drawings.
The adjoining owner must reply on Form 8 within 14 days. They can agree, disagree or ask for more information. If more detail is requested, provide revised documents promptly and transparently.
Providing detailed information: scope, location, timing, access needs
Provide detailed information that shows scope, timing and how long you will be on the neighbour’s land. Include sequencing and access windows so the surveyor and owners know what to expect.
- Include drawings, methods and proposed protection works.
- Specify access hours and sequencing for the proposed works.
- Record who will attend and expected duration on site.

Dilapidation report prior to works: documenting existing conditions (s94)
Complete a joint s94 dilapidation report before any building work. We perform a condition survey with the adjoining owner and keep a signed photographic record.
This shared record separates pre‑existing damage from changes during the project.
Access rights and obligations: 24‑hour notice windows and permitted entry (s95)
Give at least 24 hours’ notice before entering the neighbour’s land. Entry is allowed between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. and should avoid unnecessary disturbance.
We draft Forms 6 and 7, coordinate the dilapidation report and manage neighbour liaison. Call Chris: 1300 970 930 or Email Chris: chris@underpinning-melbourne.com.au. For technical context see our restumping vs underpinning guide.
Insurance, costs and responsibilities under the Building Act 1993 (Vic)
A written insurance contract and transparent cost plan reduce risk and help secure permits quickly.
Protection works insurance (s93) must indemnify against damage to the neighbour’s asset. The policy should extend for 12 months after completion. A 2014 Supreme Court principle confirms the adjoining owner may recover under that contract even if not named.
Share certificates before mobilisation. Provide the insurer’s certificate to the neighbour and the surveyor so everyone is clear on cover and limits.
Who pays and reasonable compensation (s98)
The owner is liable to reimburse the adjoining owner for loss, inconvenience and reasonable expert fees. Keep receipts and correspondence to support any claim under s98.
- Obtain cover beyond public liability.
- Confirm 12‑month post‑completion indemnity.
- Budget for expert reports and supervision costs.
Certification and RBS scrutiny — we prepare VBA‑compliant certificates and respond quickly to the surveyor’s queries. Our engineers stand behind the design and sequencing of proposed protection measures.
Call Chris: 1300 970 930 or Email Chris. Learn more at Underpinning Melbourne.

Disagreements, determinations and appeals
Disputes over a protection works notice can halt a project, but there is a defined path to resolve them. We act as your technical guide and manage the process calmly.
When the adjoining owner disagrees, the relevant building surveyor reviews your submission and may make a determination under section 87 of the Building Act 1993.
RBS determination and deemed agreement
The surveyor assesses evidence and can require more information. If no objection is lodged under section 85, consent can be deemed.
- Provide requested engineering addenda quickly.
- Keep the site accessible for inspections and extra surveys.
- Record communications and keep expert reports ready.
Escalation to the Building Appeals Board
If either party remains unsatisfied, either may appeal to the Building Appeals Board under section 141. Building must pause while an appeal is active.
The appeals board can rule on insurance scope, survey adequacy and supervision costs. We prepare concise evidence packs and represent technical matters to reduce delay and de‑escalate neighbour tensions.
For clear next steps and calm liaison, call Chris: 1300 970 930 or Email Chris.
Conclusion
Get the right engineering, documentation and liaison from the start to avoid costly interruptions.
Follow the notice and survey process under the Building Act 1993. Work with a registered building surveyor and an experienced team to keep your building program on track.
We prepare the dilapidation report, arrange insurance and draft notices for the adjoining owner. This limits delay and clarifies who is responsible for proposed works and any resulting claims.
If a dispute occurs, seek an RBS determination or appeal to the Building Appeals Board promptly. We manage evidence, communicate with the surveyor and minimise disruption for you.
Book a free structural assessment and get a fixed‑price quote. Call Chris: 1300 970 930 or Email Chris: chris@underpinning-melbourne.com.au.