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The critical importance of correct external waterproofing – balconies

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Balconies remain one of the highest-risk elements in residential construction. When external waterproofing fails, the consequences are rarely cosmetic — they are structural, expensive, and often litigated.

Across inspections and defect reports, balcony failures continue to result in:

  • Internal ceiling damage
  • Structural timber decay
  • Steel reinforcement corrosion, including fixings
  • Efflorescence and masonry degradation
  • Insurance disputes
  • Extended builder liability

In most cases, failure is not due to product selection — it is due to design detail, sequencing, or installation error.

 

Why Balconies Are High Risk

A balcony is effectively:

  • A roof
  • A wet area
  • A trafficable surface
  • A structural slab edge exposed to weather

It is permanently subjected to:

  • UV exposure
  • Thermal movement
  • Ponding risk
  • Wind-driven rain
  • Structural deflection

Unlike internal wet areas, balconies experience significant expansion and contraction. If the waterproofing system cannot accommodate this movement — or is incorrectly terminated — failure is inevitable.

 

Compliance Framework

Balcony waterproofing typically interacts with:

  • National Construction Code (NCC 2022 / 2025 Housing Provisions)
  • AS 4654.2 – Waterproofing membranes for external above-ground use – Design and installation
  • AS 3600 – Concrete structures (crack control and movement)
  • Under the NCC, balconies must:
  • Prevent water penetration into the building envelope
  • Direct surface water to drainage points
  • Maintain durability for the required design life

Compliance is not achieved by simply “applying a membrane.” It is achieved by ensuring the entire waterproofing system performs as intended.

 

Common Failure Points

  1. Incorrect Falls
  • Slabs poured flat or back-falling
  • Falls attempted through tiling rather than substrate
  • Ponding at door thresholds

Minimum finished fall is typically 1:100 as per AS4654.2, or the NCC 2025 will increase the fall to 1:80 in the substrate.

  1. Inadequate Upturns and Terminations
  • Membrane not extended sufficiently behind flashings
  • Inadequate threshold step-down
  • Missing bond breakers at wall–floor junctions
  • Penetrations don’t have collars, or have been installed too close to a wall to install one

AS 4654.2 requires correct upturn heights and secure terminations. The membrane must remain continuous and protected.

 

  1. Door Threshold Detailing

External openings are one of the most commonly overlooked sections of external waterproofing.

Common issues include:

  • No water stop or inadequate step-down
  • Membrane cut after door installation
  • Poor integration of flashings

The NCC requires buildings to prevent water ingress at external openings. Balcony interfaces must be carefully detailed to achieve this.

 

  1. Movement Not Considered
  • No control joints carried through finishes
  • Membranes applied over active cracks
  • No crack preparation or priming

 

Concrete shrinkage and slab deflection must be addressed prior to waterproofing.

 

  1. Penetrations After Installation
  • Balustrade posts drilled after membrane installation and not sealed
  • Mechanical fixings penetrating membrane
  • Sealant relied upon instead of proper flashing systems

Every penetration must be detailed before installation — not patched afterwards.

 

The Real Cost of Failure

Balcony rectification typically involves:

  • Removal of tiles and screed
  • Removal of cladding/doors to correct upturns and flashings
  • Removal and replacement of membrane
  • Retrospective engineering to move penetrations or correct falls
  • Concrete repairs
  • Internal ceiling repairs
  • Scaffold and access costs

In multi-residential construction, rectification costs can escalate significantly and frequently result in expert reports and legal proceedings.

 

Best Practice Risk Management

To reduce risk on every project:

  • Confirm falls and slab set-down at design stage
  • Detail compliant door thresholds
  • Use systems compliant with AS 4654.2
  • Follow manufacturer installation requirements
  • Photograph and document membrane installation
  • Flood test where appropriate
  • Avoid post-installation penetrations
  • Treat waterproofing as a formal hold point

Waterproofing should never be treated as a trade add-on. It is a critical building envelope system.

 

Final Message to Members

Balcony waterproofing failures are preventable.

Most defects arise from rushed sequencing, poor detailing, or inadequate supervision — not complex engineering failure.

Given the cost, liability exposure, and compliance implications, balconies should be treated as a high-risk hold point on every project.

Once the tiles are laid, the opportunity to fix the membrane correctly is gone.

If you have any questions or need further guidance, please don’t hesitate to contact our Advisory team:

📞 (02) 6175 5900
📧 workplace@mba.org.au