The Commercial Hotel is on the Tasmanian Heritage Register at
Place ID 3472. The legal trigger is Part 6 of the
Historic Cultural Heritage Act 1995 (Tas), which states, in
Heritage Tasmania’s own
Works Guidelines:
"a person must not carry out any 'works' to a place entered on the
Tasmanian Heritage Register … unless those heritage works are approved
by the Heritage Council."
Approvals come in two forms:
a Minor Works Approval for works with negligible heritage impact,
and a Discretionary Permit for everything else. Façade work,
window and door changes, internal works that affect significant fabric,
kitchen fit-out, and DDA / fire-safety upgrades can all be in scope —
not just structural alterations.
Why this matters for any feasibility budget.
Reopening a long-closed pub triggers Building Code change-of-use
upgrades (fire safety, accessibility, structural) and Food Standard
3.2.3 kitchen requirements (impervious flooring, coving, mechanical
ventilation). On a heritage-listed place, those have to be designed not
to alter significant fabric — which means a heritage architect, a BCA
compliance surveyor, and a sequenced dual approval pathway between
the Heritage Council and Huon Valley Council. Standard commercial-pub
renovation estimates do not apply.
Full briefing: Heritage & building briefing.