Enclosed (Lock-Up) Inspection in Narangba
The enclosed, or lock-up, inspection checks your new Narangba home once it is weather-tight — roof, cladding, windows and external doors on — but before the internal linings hide the wall cavities. VG Inspect carries out an independent, QBCC-licensed enclosed inspection across Narangba's estate and acreage builds, checking external cladding, brickwork or render, articulation joints, weep holes, window and door head flashings and roof penetrations against NCC Volume 2 Part 3.5 and the relevant Australian Standards. You receive a same-day digital report with every item photographed and referenced. This is the stage where the home's weather defences are confirmed before they are sealed up — a smart checkpoint on any Narangba new build, particularly on the more exposed elevated lots.
Book an InspectionEnclosed (Lock-Up) Inspection from $550 · Same-day digital report · QBCC Licence 1318443 · Call 07 3180 8041
Last updated: May 2026
Why a enclosed (lock-up) inspection matters in Narangba
Once the internal linings go up in your Narangba home, the wall cavities, flashings and the back of the cladding are hidden for good. The enclosed stage is the only practical opportunity to confirm the home is genuinely weather-tight — that flashings direct water out of the cavity, weep holes are clear, articulation joints are placed correctly for the soil movement common in Narangba's clay pockets, and the cladding is fixed as specified. On the suburb's elevated and bushland-edge blocks, where walls can take more wind-driven rain, water that enters through a missed flashing or blocked weep hole may only reveal itself months or years later behind finished surfaces. Catching it at lock-up, while the cavity is still open and photographable, is far simpler than tracing a hidden leak after handover.
Local conditions in Narangba (4504)
On Narangba's reactive-clay pockets, articulation (control) joints carry real importance on brick-veneer and rendered homes, because they let the structure absorb seasonal soil movement without cracking the cladding — so confirming they are provided and correctly positioned at lock-up matters here. The suburb's elevated, sometimes exposed and bushland-fringe lots also see wind-driven rain against the walls, which makes well-installed head flashings, clear weep holes and clean cavities key to keeping water out. With both new estate homes and larger acreage builds reaching lock-up across Narangba, this is the right moment to verify the cladding system and flashings are set up to shed water before the linings go on.
What we check at the enclosed stage
The enclosed, or lock-up, inspection happens once the home is weather-tight — roof, external cladding, windows and external doors are on — but before the internal linings hide the wall cavities. It is the stage where the building's weather defences are checked before they are sealed up. Here is what we check against NCC Volume 2 Part 3.5, the relevant Australian Standards and the manufacturers' specifications:
External cladding & masonry
- External cladding, brick veneer or render checked for installation, fixing and finish per the manufacturer's specification and NCC Volume 2 Part 3.5.
- Articulation (control) joints provided and positioned correctly to accommodate movement, especially on reactive soils.
- Weep holes left clear and at the correct spacing, and wall cavities checked clean of mortar droppings.
Flashings & weatherproofing
- Window and door head, sill and jamb flashings installed to shed water out of the cavity.
- Roof covering, ridge, valley and penetration flashings checked per NCC Volume 2 Part 3.5.
- Sealants and junctions at penetrations, meter boxes and service entries confirmed weather-tight.
Openings & enclosure
- Windows and external doors installed plumb, operating correctly and sealed to the frame.
- Sarking / wall wrap continuity and lapping checked where still visible before linings.
- Roof space and eaves inspected for framing, batten and sarking installation before ceilings are fixed.
Every item is photographed and referenced to the relevant Australian Standard, NCC clause or the QBCC Standards and Tolerances Guide, then delivered in a same-day digital report you can hand straight to your builder. See the full construction stage inspection process, or the PCI / handover inspection for the final stage before you accept the keys.
Other inspection stages in Narangba
Most owners book several stages across the build so defects are caught before the next trade covers them. Alongside the enclosed (lock-up) inspection, we also inspect:
Inspection pricing in Narangba
Enclosed (Lock-Up) Inspection FAQs — Narangba
What is an enclosed or lock-up inspection in Narangba?
It is the inspection carried out once the home is weather-tight — roof, external cladding, windows and external doors installed — but before the internal plasterboard and linings cover the wall cavities. It focuses on the building's weather defences: cladding, head flashings, weep holes, articulation joints and roof penetrations.
Why do articulation joints matter on Narangba homes?
Narangba has reactive-clay pockets that move with seasonal moisture changes, and articulation joints let a brick or rendered wall accommodate that movement without cracking. At lock-up these joints are confirmed as provided and correctly positioned, along with clear weep holes and clean cavities, so the cladding performs the way it was designed to.
When should I book the enclosed inspection?
Once the home is at lock-up — weather-tight with cladding, windows and external doors on — but before the internal linings start. That timing allows the flashings, cavities and weep holes to be seen and photographed while they are still accessible, which is valuable on Narangba's more exposed elevated lots.
How much does an enclosed inspection cost in Narangba?
Enclosed (lock-up) inspections are from $550 with a same-day digital report and no travel surcharge across Narangba and the wider Moreton Bay Regional Council area. It pairs well with a frame inspection for full coverage before the internal linings go on.
Your inspector
Every Narangba inspection is carried out personally by Adam Gates, an independent QBCC-licensed building inspector (Licence 1318443). Nothing is subcontracted — the person who licences and signs your report is the person who stood on your site. You can verify the licence yourself on the QBCC online licence search before you book. VG Inspect holds a 5.0 rating across 65 verified reviews and is fully insured.
Book your Narangba enclosed (lock-up) inspection
Same-week availability · QBCC licensed · Same-day digital reports.
Book an InspectionCall Adam on 07 3180 8041 — Enclosed (Lock-Up) Inspection from $550.