In accessibility design, even small details like the location of a door control button—can have a significant impact on usability. For power-operated hinged doors, conflicting requirements between the National Construction Code (NCC) and AS 1428.1:2021 have created uncertainty for designers, certifiers, and builders.
The discrepancy lies in how each legislation defines the acceptable placement of manual controls:
At face value, these requirements conflict: one pushes controls further away, while the other brings them closer to the door swing.
Why This Matters
The placement of manual controls is critical for:
Incorrect placement can create safety risks or make a compliant-looking design practically unusable.
This is where legislative hierarchy becomes important.
The Access Code for Buildings is made under Commonwealth law (Disability Discrimination Act 1992). Because of this, it overrides conflicting provisions in the NCC where inconsistencies arise.
This effectively means that NCC Clause D3D26(2)(a)(ii) does not apply where it conflicts with AS 1428.1:2021 and Access Code.
In practice, this means: