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This is what it says in the Act:
116 Owners, occupiers and other persons not to interfere with structure of lot or services to lot
(1) An owner, mortgagee or covenant chargee in possession (whether in person or not), lessee or occupier of a lot must not do anything or permit anything to be done on or in relation to that lot so that:
(a) any support or shelter provided by that lot for another lot or common property is interfered with, or
(b) the passage or provision of water, sewage, drainage, gas, electricity, garbage, artificially heated or cooled air, heating oil and other services (including telephone, radio and television services) through or by means of any pipes, wires, cables or ducts for the time being in the lot is interfered with.
(2) The owner of a lot must not alter the structure of the lot without giving to the owners corporation, not later than 14 days before commencement of the alteration, a written notice describing the proposed alteration.
What can you do about it? You could apply to the CTTT for an interim order to stop work until the situation is resolved. The relevant CTTT fact sheet is HERE. The forms you require are for an interim order and, although an interim order doesn't require mediation, the interim order request must be accompanied by an application for adjudication and for mediation.
This will cost you money and is far from a guaranteed success. So you have to ask yourself what your is desired outcome.
If it's to prevent the work happening at all, then taking this through the CTTT, at this stage, is probably the best approach.
But if you simply want to make sure that no other owner is disadvantaged by this work, then you need guarantees from the renovator that they will remedy any problem that presents iself immediately and without question.
The point of that is to make them make abolutely sure there will be no impact on the rest of the building. It will be very much in the best interests of the renovators to go way beyond the requirements of Australian Building Standards to ensure there is no noise impact on other apartments.
And it's at this point that I can only suggest your EC seeks advice from a specialist strata lawyer as soon as possible. The unanimity in the building against his proposal is a powerful weapon but only a strata lawyer can tell you how to use it most effectively. Your legal advice may well contradict theirs (especially if their lawyer is not a strata expert). It will cost money but it will save everyone a lot of grief in the long term.