The master thesis deals with the procedures for issuing a completion certificate in Slovenia, Croatia, Austria and the United Kingdom. The task covers a historical overview of legislation in this area; it deals with the ZGO-1, which was used from 1 January 2003 to 31 May 2018 and the GZ, which is in use from 1 June 2018 onwards. In addition, the purpose of the task was to determine how much the investor, designers and supervisors, as participants in the construction, are aware of the importance of the certificate and the consequences, in case the construction does not follow the conditions from the construction permit.
With methods and research approaches, such as descriptive, analytical, comparative and method of complication and statistical methods, I presented both Slovenian laws and construction laws of Croatia, Austria and the United Kingdom, and also verified the participants in the construction with the help of a survey.
The research showed that the control of the built objects was carried out already during the time of the Austro – Hungarian monarchy, and that the processes throughout history changed and adapted to the social system. The GZ study found that the Slovenian legislation is nearing the West European, the principle of responsibility of the participants in the construction, especially the experts involved, is coming to the forefront. It has also been shown that the participants in the construction process are very familiar with the procedure for issuing an completion certificate and the consequences when the request for the issuance of a valid permit is rejected.
The contribution of the master's thesis theme is in a concise and comprehensive overview of the conformity of construction verification with the issued building permit and its development over time. With contributions, information will be provided on how to tackle the process of obtaining a completion certificate. This assignment tackles the area of issuing a completion certificate for the first time on the basis of GZ, which began to be used on 1 June 2018.
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