Purpose
This post sets out what DesignDevise (DD) does—and does not do—under common solar engagements. It also records the Client’s responsibilities for the base building. Solar is a secondary installation; it must not proceed on a compromised or unverified structure.
Status
Not included in our standard solar engagements and generally not offered under a solar scope. A standalone building assessment requires inspections, condition/defect review, load rating and a formal report. This is outside our solar design remit.
Client responsibility
Solar panels are secondary elements and must only be installed on buildings that are structurally serviceable and within their intended design life. By proceeding with a solar installation, the Client is representing that the base structure is fit for purpose.
If there are pre-existing issues (e.g., corrosion, cracking, section loss, damaged fixings, or unauthorised alterations), the proper sequence is to first assess and rectify the building before considering solar. If this step was skipped, the Client should question how solar feasibility was considered without also considering building feasibility. Our solar scope does not extend to cataloguing or resolving pre-existing building deficiencies.
What we do
What we don’t do
Typical certificate disclaimer
“Assessment of supporting roof(s) and structure(s) is excluded and must be checked by others. Client to engage a structural engineer.”
What we do
What We Don’t Do
Critical Assumptions
Typical certificate wording
“This assessment assumes that the existing structure(s) are capable of withstanding all applicable loads in accordance with current Australian Standards. It is also assumed that the roof structure is in generally good condition and has not been subject to significant loading or modifications.”
Sometimes Clients ask us to “check seismic” for the solar panels under the Racking + Building Assessment. It is important to be clear that under a solar design scope we do not provide a full seismic assessment or certification of the entire building. That is a separate, much larger exercise, even if full structural drawings are available.
What we do is limited; we check the incremental effect of the solar panels on the main roof members (purlins, rafters, and key connections) under seismic load combinations, in accordance with AS 1170.4 (Australia) or NZS 1170.5 (New Zealand). This confirms only whether the additional solar loads materially change the behaviour of the roof system.
If the parent building itself has any underlying seismic deficiencies, those remain outside our scope and are the Client’s responsibility to identify and address under a separate building assessment. Our review of solar-related effects should not be taken as recertification or upgrade of the existing building for seismic compliance.