Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Dual Occupancy - Strata vs. Torrens Title Subdivision; and the winner is...

Last week I presented the pros and cons of Strata vs. Torrens Title subdivision for a dual occupancy project. 
For this project, we are building two free standing homes. The land is not a corner block, so one home is positioned behind the other and they will share a common driveway.
Our first response was to try and achieve a two lot Torrens Title subdivision because it’s what most people understand when purchasing houses.  Strata subdivision tends to be associated with multi unit developments, rather than house and land projects. 
But, when you think about it, if you have two houses sharing a common driveway, then there should be some formal arrangement on who is going to pay for the upkeep of the driveway.  A strata subdivision covers this off whilst a Torrens subdivision leaves driveway maintenance up in the air or for owners to fight over.

We asked our surveyor to set up the Strata Plan giving each house its own land on title, minimising common areas to the driveway and the dividing fence between the two houses.  Being a small, two lot strata subdivision; it means that we’d be exempt from the more formal strata management of larger schemes.  As the houses are freestanding and have their own yards, it is quite a simple process. 

If our client, on completion of the development decides to hold both houses, they may also decide not to even register their subdivision immediately. We would have the approval in place and this has no shelf life, so they could register the subdivision years down the track when and if they decide to sell.

If they decide to sell one house and keep one, after registering the subdivision, all costs for managing, maintaining, repairing and insuring the common property are shared by the owners in direct proportion to their lot's respective unit entitlements. In this case it is an equal share; each lot has one unit entitlement, so it is very straight forward to manage. Each owner is responsible for 50% of any costs to repair or maintain the driveway/common area.


Small Strata Schemes (2 Lots)
The special provisions for 2-lot schemes are:
·         the 2 owners automatically form the Executive Committee removing the requirement for an election
·         a quorum for all meetings is when the 2 owners are present
·         Building insurance is not compulsory where the two buildings are detached and there are no additional buildings on common property. However, both owners must decide to forgo insurance cover by unanimous resolution at a meeting. Each owner may then insure the structure on their own lot.
·         If the buildings are detached, the owners can decide not to have a sinking fund provided there are no additional buildings on common property. Both owners must decide this by unanimous resolution at a meeting.
With the advent of the compulsory 10-year sinking fund plan legislation, 2-lot schemes managed to get special consideration. Essentially, a 2-lot scheme doesn't need to have a sinking fund.
Finally, there are no requirements for two-lot schemes to have any audit of accounts and financial statements.  Reference: www.strataman.com.au

Property Bloom found by setting up the strata title subdivision in the right way that it was the better way to subdivide. Not only does a small strata subdivision (two lots) cost a lot less in development costs than a two lot Torrens subdivision, it is also a much quicker process.  
The winner is, in our books is a Strata Subdivision for a dual occupancy where there is a shared driveway.

7 comments:

  1. if there are 2 lots, but one has a house and the other has 2 units, is the shared driveway maintenance cost split 3 ways?

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  2. Hi Sussane, it will depend how your surveyor sets up the subdivision and entitlements for each dwelling but in this example I use above, it was an equal entitlement so 50% each dwelling. If one dwelling was smaller and on less land, you could allocate say 40% to the smaller dwelling. Whatever the percentage entitlement means the same for the share of any costs to driveway or fence. Hope this makes sense. Jo

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  3. Hi Joanna, In your last article you mentioned Strata subdivision is better than Torrens for dual occupancy. Can you give your thoughts and comparison about resale price as I think mostly people look for torrens. Also with common wall and shared roof the insurance becomes mandatory. In today's world the same type of houses are called community title and in community title even the garage wall and roof is common, it is not mandatory to have insurance. Is it possible to convert strata dual occupancy to torrens, if both the owners are ready to share the cost? Can you advise how much will be estimated cost to convert dual occupancy strata to torrens or even community?

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  6. Dual occupancy typically refers to the building of a second dwelling behind an existing dwelling. Just like subdividing land, there is no minimum land size required for a dual occupancy development.

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