
Brosnan nabbed the Multi-Residential Building and Mega Project ($10million-plus) categories at the Australasian Concrete Repair and Building Remedial Association (ACRA) Awards at a ceremony in Sydney earlier this month.
It then took out the overall Michael Rutherford ACRA Remedial Building Excellence Award for its work to remedy a litany of weathertightness and other building defects that emerged in the 83-unit lakeside complex, which sits below Frankton Rd, soon after its completion 19 years ago.
In an ACRA media statement, Brosnan CEO Geoff Nash says it’s pleasing to be recognised for the work it does in the remedial sector, which "often goes unseen" within the wider construction industry.
The awards acknowledged the project’s "technical complexity and collaborative delivery of work", which has included a full re-cladding, re-roofing, joinery replacement and internal refurbishment.
The work’s also extended to the buildings’ structural elements, balconies and passive fire compliance, with "hundreds of additional defects" uncovered as it’s progressed.
The four-building complex has remained operational throughout the work, with at least 75% of its rooms available to owners or guests.
Oaks Shores body corporate chairman Graeme Kruger told Mountain Scene last month work on blocks 3 and 4 was expected to be finished by the middle of next year, after which the latter would be fitted out and operating by the end of next year.











