Mr. Wyatt questions the Finance portfolio regarding the replacement of roof tiles on Hale House, inquiring about costs, origin, and disposal methods. The answer confirms the replacement due to the tiles' condition, provides cost and origin details, and explains the recycling process.

AnsweredQoN 7897Legislative Assembly
Asked
2 May 2012
Portfolio
Finance

QuestionView source ↗

I refer to work on the roof of Hale House as part of its refurbishment, and ask:
(a) were Hale House roof tiles replaced with new tiles; and
(i) if so, what was the total cost of the replacement roof tiles;
(ii) if so, what is the country or state of origin of the replacement roof tiles; and
(iii) if so, were the original roof tiles disposed of and, if so, how; and
(b) if the roof tiles were not replaced with new tiles, were the tiles removed and replaced as part of the refurbishment; and
(i) if so, for what purpose were the tiles removed and replaced; and
(ii) if so, what was the cost of removing and replacing the tiles?

AnswerView source ↗

Answered
12 June 2012
Responded by
Minister representing the Minister for Finance
Response time
41 days
(a) Yes, due to brittleness, fretting and cracking.  These tiles had reached the end of their useful life.
(i) $108,000
(ii) Australia
(iii) Original roof tiles were crushed and recycled by Bristile as part of the supply and install contract.
(b) Not applicable.
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