Enter your email Address

LookUpStrata

Strata Information Leading to Open Discussion

  • The Strata Magazine banner
  • Subscribe to LookUpStrata banner
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
      • COVID-19
      • 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 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 » Common Property NSW » NSW: Gardening in Strata & Community Schemes: Some Thoughts

NSW: Gardening in Strata & Community Schemes: Some Thoughts

Published March 1, 2022 By Allison Benson, Kerin Benson Lawyers 4 Comments Last Updated March 4, 2022

Share with your strata community

0 shares
  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

This article is about Gardening in strata.

While this may not be a very interesting topic for some, for others I’ll have just hit on a sore point. Why? Gardens can be very personal, for instance, I love my slightly untidy but very liveable low maintenance native garden but for some, all they would see is wasted space.

The importance in strata and community schemes is that, in these schemes, the common property / association gardens are just that, common. Common property /and association gardens exist for the amenity of all in the scheme not just for one person. They may have no other purpose than to add some beauty and greenery to the built environment (just by being, they reduce heat within the scheme) but they may also be designed to aid privacy, assist in water retention or drainage, direct traffic flow or in some cases they may be important to aid the natural environment such as bee friendly gardens. Whatever purpose they have, most of us enjoy them even if we don’t consciously think of them.

GET NOTIFIED WHEN WE PUBLISH NEW Q&AS, NEWS AND ARTICLES TO THE SITE

Who is to maintain the common garden?

Gardens can however raise a number of issues. The first is that of maintenance. Who is to maintain the common garden? Is there a paid gardener, facilities manager or is it a group of volunteers either conducting working bees or chipping away at it. Volunteers are generally covered under your scheme’s insurance if an accident happens however if your scheme contracts with a gardener, it’s important to know if they are adequately insured and if they are covered under your scheme’s insurance in case an accident occurs and someone is hurt or the property is damaged.

The second issue that seems to arise is personal taste. One of the most heated disputes I have been involved with was between two groups in a scheme. One wanted the common property area to have a tropical resort style garden and the other wanted an English cottage garden. There were stealth gardeners who under the cover of night would plant their preferred garden version (no, I do not know what they did with the plants they replaced). Much time, effort and money was expended and the dispute created a lot of ill will and both sides, breached the scheme’s by-laws not to damage the common property and common property plans and the obligation under section 153 of Strata Schemes Management Act 2015.

How did it get resolved? Well, strata and community title schemes are ultimately governed by majority with strata committees and association committees obliged to act in the best interests of all. In this case, a landscape gardener was engaged to propose three garden styles with costings for each and owners corporation held a general meeting for a vote on each proposal.

Another issue is that a garden may not just be a garden in that it may be a requirement under the development consent to have certain plants or a certain number of plants or it may be a condition to have a specific drainage system which may be integrated into the gardening design. In changing the gardens, a well intentioned owners corporation may be in breach of the development consent conditions for the property.

Not least is a concern that is becoming more common. If a garden is also a food source, how is that food (be it fruit, vegetables, honey etc.) to be distributed?

The key takeaways here are that:

  1. Check your scheme’s by-laws. There will generally always be a by-law prohibiting a lot owner or occupier from damaging the common property and there may also be a by-law prohibiting damage to common area gardens. This means a lot owner or occupier cannot just dig up a common property garden and either replace it or change it.
  2. Check your authority to make changes to the common property or association property gardens. There may be a need to have the approval at a general meeting to change the property or there may be a need to obtain approval of a consent authority to make structural changes to a garden.
  3. Gardens are not just a beautiful addition to the community. They can cause conflicts and it is important to think about how they are used and maintained.

Allison Benson
Kerin Benson Lawyers
E: [email protected]
P: 02 4032 7990

This is general information and should not be considered to be legal advice. I recommend you obtain legal advice specific to your individual situation.

This post appears in Strata News #549.

Have a question or something to add to the article? Leave a comment below.

Embed

Read next:

  • NSW: Upgrade That Balustrade!
  • NSW: Dividing Fences and Trees – Part 1: Fences – the Who What and When
  • NSW: Q&A Water Usage Costs and Seperate Water Meters in Apartments

This article has been republished with permission from the author and first appeared on the Thoughts from a Strata Lawyer website.

Visit our Maintenance and Common Property OR NSW Strata Legislation pages.

Looking for strata information concerning your state? For state-specific strata information, take a look here.

Are you not sure about some of the strata terms used in this article? Take a look at our NSW Strata Glossary to help with your understanding.

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

0 shares
  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

About Allison Benson, Kerin Benson Lawyers

Allison is a strata lawyer who has provided general strata advice, acted in strata disputes (including building defect disputes) and worked with clients in preparing and enforcing by-laws and strata management statements, since 2008. From 2012 onwards, Allison has acted exclusively on behalf of owners corporations and lot owners in respect of both strata and community association disputes and building and construction disputes.

Allison has extensive experience in commercial litigation and dispute resolution, having represented clients in contractual claims, interpretation of by-laws and rules, Home Building Act claims and levy recovery claims at all levels of court proceedings, including in the Court of Appeal and in the former CTTT (now the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal known as NCAT). Allison’s knowledge across a variety of strata schemes matters enables her to advise owners corporations, lot owners and other interested parties on a range of issues and to represent their interests both informally and before the courts.

Allison is a member of the Australian College of Community Association Lawyers (ACCAL), the Newcastle Law Society and the Society of Construction Law Australia. She holds a Bachelor of Laws (Hons) from Macquarie University and a Bachelor of Business from the University of Newcastle.
Allison's LinkedIn Profile.
Allison is a regular contributor to LookUpStrata. You can take a look at Allison's articles here .

Comments

  1. Em says

    March 2, 2022 at 10:45 pm

    Interesting article, thanks.
    Even small changes, impact on longer term convenience. In WA, a committee of 7 in an >50’s scheme was keen to approve a resident putting their rose bushes in a front lawned area next to a walkway – until encouraged to consider longer term impact by for access by movers, was the next resident going to maintain bushes when the current resident moves or dies, did it require ‘exclusive use’ arrangements, potential change to reticulation pressure by alerting the number/location of sprinklers…
    Even with the best of intentions, common areas should remain so. The hard part is dealing with historic situations or, like Alan’s dilemma, putting responsibility back on individual owners where the strata may have entered a contract for which it has no authority (non-common).

    Reply
    • Liza Admin says

      March 10, 2022 at 7:27 am

      Hi Em

      The following response has been provided by Allison Benson, Kerin Benson Lawyers:

      Hi. Thanks for the feedback. I agree that something seemingly simple can have a huge impact and cause much distress yet so many schemes don’t consider the long term consequences of a change.

      Reply
  2. Alan McDonald says

    March 2, 2022 at 3:15 pm

    The Strata Committee accepted a $13000 offer from a landscaper to carry out landscaping work. without informing anyone and without minuting the deal. The contract involved altering common property without the owners corporation approval.

    When this became known the strata committee broadcast that it had renegotlated the deal so that none of the work involves common property. We are not certain that the renegotiation took place. We’ll have to check with the contractor.

    However we still have an unapproved $13000 c0ntract. Can the contract in its renegotiate or previous format form be ratified? If so how?

    Thank you

    Reply
    • Nikki Jovicic says

      September 19, 2022 at 11:02 am

      Hi Alan

      Allison Benson from Kerin Benson Lawyers has responded to your question on this article: NSW: Q&A Owners Corporation Committee Decisions

      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
  • Advert: StrataLoans
  • Advert: StrataLoans
  • Advert: StrataLoans
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

  • Liza Admin on QLD: Q&A Renting, Selling or Reallocation – Exclusive Use of Common Property
  • Liza Admin on QLD: Q&A Holding Positions on the Executive and Ordinary Committee
  • William Marquand on QLD: What does Strata Insurance cover? What do we need to disclose?
  • Tyrone Shandiman on QLD: What does Strata Insurance cover? What do we need to disclose?
  • Liza Admin on SA: Q&A Strata Regulations About Car Parking Rules
  • Liza Admin on SA: Q&A Rights to have pets for residents in strata
  • Tyrone Shandiman on NAT: Q&A Yearly Increases To Strata Insurance
  • Tyrone Shandiman on NAT: Q&A Yearly Increases To Strata Insurance
  • Tyrone Shandiman on QLD: What does Strata Insurance cover? What do we need to disclose?
  • Robert Budniak on NSW: E-Bike and E-Scooter Battery Fires in Strata on the Increase

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 © 2024 · LookUpStrata ® Pty Ltd · All rights reserved