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Accreditation

The course has been endorsed nationally by the Australian Institute of Building Surveyors and has been designed to equip professionals with the qualifications necessary to be an Accredited Certifier, Building (Grade 1) and Principal Certifying Authority (Grade 1) under the NSW Building Surveyors and Allied Professions Inc Accredited Scheme.

Admission

Admission to this course is via UAC. International applicants should contact UWS International for details on admission. Contact information for the International Office is available from the University's website.

A degree or diploma in building, building surveying or its equivalent in a relevant area. Candidates with an Associate Diploma in a related area must have at least four years relevant professional work experience in the field or a related profession.

To qualify for the award of a Graduate Diploma in Building Surveying, a candidate must successfully complete 60 credit points from the units below. Candidates must select appropriate set of units dependent on previous study in consultation with the course coordinator.

Students with an engineering background:

Fire and Building Regulations

To familiarise students with the BCA and in particular those aspects of fire engineering incorporated within the regulations. To provide students with an opportunity to relate current research to the BCA. Topics: Building Code of Australia General Provisions, Structure, Fire Resistance Services and Equipment, Health and Amenity Ancillary Provisions, Philosophy, performance versus prescriptions, testing, produce accreditation, processes. Relationship of research to the regulations, authorities, fire hazard assessment, for detection and prevention, material and people behaviour during fire.

Building Studies

Building studies seeks to analyse in depth the factors that influence the building industry. Students will be required to critically evaluate these factors. Topics: advances in both materials technology and construction techniques. Fire engineering and fire safety considerations including the health and amenity of building design and regulation. The philosophy of conservation and its application to building, cultural significance as an issue, energy conservation as an issue. Building services, regulation, impact on design, construction and maintenance requirements. Principles of building engineering related to the construction industry. Construction management from personnel through to scheduling and time management. Local government and State government administration and their effect on the building industry. Royal commissions and their impact on building law. Industrial law and industrial relations, contract law and planning law and the regulation of building activities. Building economics from estimating and quantity surveying to building macro economics. Development management, inception of reality. The relationship between building owners and occupiers on the performance and maintenance of buildings.

Development Control

Objectives: to analyse those forces important in determining the allocation and use of land and resources together with the contributions of development to the built and natural environment. Topics: urban and rural design issues; the impact of the 3 tier Government process on development control. The seminar process will examine the legal, political and technical issues relevant to impact assessments. Particular attention will be paid to the role of the private sector in developing controls, self regulation and appeal processes. Planning management in both the micro and macro environments will be examined in the context of energy, community resources and its strategic effects on; the recycling of existing land and non-renewable natural resources. Special issues to be considered. Hazardous environments, bush fires, floods, earthquakes, cyclone areas.

Fire Engineering Principles

The unit describes the principles used to design fire safety systems for life safety and introduces other objectives and processes that need to be followed to complete a fire safety engineering study. Students will be encouraged to develop an understanding of the various types of computational tools used in engineering design of fire safety systems.

Fire Technology Principles

The unit introduces students to the basics of fire behaviour so that they may appreciate fire safety systems and their components. The unit will provide the basis for understanding fire safety engineering and the techniques and tools used in fire safety engineering.

Students with a building background:

Fire and Building Regulations

To familiarise students with the BCA and in particular those aspects of fire engineering incorporated within the regulations. To provide students with an opportunity to relate current research to the BCA. Topics: Building Code of Australia General Provisions, Structure, Fire Resistance Services and Equipment, Health and Amenity Ancillary Provisions, Philosophy, performance versus prescriptions, testing, produce accreditation, processes. Relationship of research to the regulations, authorities, fire hazard assessment, for detection and prevention, material and people behaviour during fire.

Building Studies

Building studies seeks to analyse in depth the factors that influence the building industry. Students will be required to critically evaluate these factors. Topics: advances in both materials technology and construction techniques. Fire engineering and fire safety considerations including the health and amenity of building design and regulation. The philosophy of conservation and its application to building, cultural significance as an issue, energy conservation as an issue. Building services, regulation, impact on design, construction and maintenance requirements. Principles of building engineering related to the construction industry. Construction management from personnel through to scheduling and time management. Local government and State government administration and their effect on the building industry. Royal commissions and their impact on building law. Industrial law and industrial relations, contract law and planning law and the regulation of building activities. Building economics from estimating and quantity surveying to building macro economics. Development management, inception of reality. The relationship between building owners and occupiers on the performance and maintenance of buildings.

Development Control

Objectives: to analyse those forces important in determining the allocation and use of land and resources together with the contributions of development to the built and natural environment. Topics: urban and rural design issues; the impact of the 3 tier Government process on development control. The seminar process will examine the legal, political and technical issues relevant to impact assessments. Particular attention will be paid to the role of the private sector in developing controls, self regulation and appeal processes. Planning management in both the micro and macro environments will be examined in the context of energy, community resources and its strategic effects on; the recycling of existing land and non-renewable natural resources. Special issues to be considered. Hazardous environments, bush fires, floods, earthquakes, cyclone areas.

Fire Engineering Principles

The unit describes the principles used to design fire safety systems for life safety and introduces other objectives and processes that need to be followed to complete a fire safety engineering study. Students will be encouraged to develop an understanding of the various types of computational tools used in engineering design of fire safety systems.

Building Engineering

Objectives: to provide candidates with an appreciation of the factors that contribute to engineering decisions in total building design, and the evaluation of failure modes in buildings. Topics: soil mechanics, technology, failure theories, soil pedology, flow of water in soils, natural and stabilised soils. Disposal of surface; of water, subsoil water from sites. Flood water retention and removal. Structural concepts, loading patterns, properties of materials construction systems, evaluation and acceptance of materials, testing techniques, composite components. Altering the mechanical properties of construction materials in manufacture or in fatigue situations. Successful performance of buildings, failure in buildings.

Fire Technology Principles

The unit introduces students to the basics of fire behaviour so that they may appreciate fire safety systems and their components. The unit will provide the basis for understanding fire safety engineering and the techniques and tools used in fire safety engineering.

Graduate Diploma in Building Surveying

This course has been developed in consultation with practising Fire Safety Engineers and Building Surveyors to meet the needs of the Building Surveying industry. Graduates will be equipped with the knowledge to work in the private sector or in Government.

Building Surveying at UWS

This is one of only two graduate diploma courses available in this area in Australia. The UWS Graduate Diploma in Building Surveying has 12 years history, and takes a balanced approach to training students in fundamental knowledge and problem solving skills.

Students will gain the understanding of building regulations, fire engineering principles, building fire services and development control. Students will gain knowledge in the practical assessment and approval process adopted by the industry.

This course is taught by leading industrial experts as well as academics at the University. It is a distance learning course, with flexible modes offered to cater for students’ needs.

It’s all about career opportunities

Graduates from this course can pursue careers as building surveyors, construction project managers or safety inspectors.Students may be exposed to more employment opportunities while enrolled in the course.

Duration

One year full-time or two years part-time

Location

Blacktown

Course Structure

Qualification for this award requires the successful completion of 60 credit points.

Professional Recognition

The course has been endorsed nationally by the Australian Institute of Building Surveyors and has been designed to equip professionals with the qualifications necessary to be an Accredited Certifier, Building (Grade 1) and Principal Certifying Authority (Grade 1) under the NSW Building Surveyors and Allied Professions Inc Accredited Scheme.

Admission Requirements

A degree or diploma in building, building surveying or its equivalent in a relevant area. Candidates with an Associate Diploma in a related area must have at least four years relevant professional work experience in the field or a related profession.

How to Apply

All domestic applications for entry to UWS postgraduate courses must be made through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC). Step by step instructions are available on on How to Apply pages.

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