New Zealand · AI-powered · Free to try
Free Concrete ITP Generator
Generate a complete Inspection & Test Plan for concrete works in seconds. Covers pre-pour preparation, reinforcement inspection, concrete placement, curing, and post-pour verification — with hold points and witness points set automatically.
- Concrete-specific hold points and witness points
- Aligned with AS/NZS standards and the NZ Building Code
- Sign up free to download your PDF
Trade
Scope
Brand
Project
Finish
What trade is this ITP for?
We'll tailor the inspection items, hold points and standards to your trade.
Applicable Standards (AS/NZS & NZ Building Code)
- AS 3600 — Concrete Structures
- AS 1379 — Specification and Supply of Concrete
- AS 3610 — Formwork for Concrete
FAQ
- What hold points are required for a concrete pour?
- The two critical hold points for concrete work are reinforcement inspection (verifying bar size, spacing, laps, chairs, and cover before formwork close-up) and pre-pour authorisation (confirming formwork, embedments, and services are complete). These items cannot be verified once concrete is placed, which is why they require mandatory sign-off before the pour proceeds.
- What New Zealand Standard applies to concrete ITPs?
- NZS 3101 (Concrete Structures) is the primary standard. It covers design, detailing, and construction requirements including reinforcement placement tolerances, concrete cover, and curing. AS 1379 (Specification and Supply of Concrete) covers mix design, supply, and testing. Most project specifications reference both standards in the concrete ITP.
- Do I need a separate ITP for each concrete pour?
- Not necessarily. A single concrete ITP template can cover all pours on a project if the scope is consistent. Each pour is then recorded as a separate entry or lot within the same ITP register. For projects with significantly different pour types (e.g. footings vs suspended slabs vs precast), separate ITPs may be appropriate.
- How do I evidence that a pour happened in compliant conditions?
- AS 1379 sets temperature limits for concrete at placement, and NZS 3101 governs curing. The defensible answer is to capture the conditions at the moment of pour — not type them up afterwards. HoldPoint records the inspector's GPS coordinates and the live weather (temperature, humidity, wind, sky) at every sign-off, and prints it under the signature on the approved PDF. If a pour is later challenged, the conditions at the time are already on the document.