Interior Surfaces — System Brief

Interior surfaces are the finished layers of your habitable envelope — walls, floors, ceilings, paint, trim, and stairs. Most repairs in this system are cheap and reversible. The exceptions are small in number but high-stakes: asbestos and lead hazards in older homes, water damage that reaches structural layers, and structural movement that presents as a cosmetic crack. Get the hazard and source questions right first; the cosmetic work follows.


The rules that matter most (system-wide tripwires)

These are the conditions that stop routine maintenance and escalate — pulled from the highest-stakes Bottom line tripwires across all 6 components.

  • Water source before surface repair — always. Whether a ceiling stain, a swollen baseboard, a buckled floor, or soft drywall, the finish material is the symptom. Patch or replace without fixing the source and you seal in moisture, grow mould, and guarantee recurrence. → ceilings (Home Systems), floors (Home Systems), interior-walls (Home Systems), trim-molding (Home Systems)

  • Pre-1990 home: stop before sanding, cutting, or scraping any surface. Drywall joint compound, textured ceiling coatings, and vinyl floor tiles from this era may contain asbestos. Dry-sanding or scraping releases airborne fibres. Test first via a WorkSafeBC-accredited lab. Since January 1, 2024, BC law requires a WorkSafeBC Asbestos Abatement Licence (AAL) for any abatement contractor. → interior-walls (Home Systems), ceilings (Home Systems), floors (Home Systems)

  • Pre-1978 home: treat all painted surfaces as lead until tested. About 75% of pre-1978 Canadian homes contain some lead paint. Health Canada states there is no safe lead exposure level. Never dry-sand or heat-strip painted surfaces in these homes without a lead test first. Large-area disturb work requires a WorkSafeBC-certified abatement contractor. → paint-finishes (Home Systems), trim-molding (Home Systems), stairs-railings (Home Systems)

  • Stair-step or horizontal cracks are structural signals — do not patch. These crack patterns encode foundation or lateral soil pressure, not cosmetic movement. Patching hides the evidence. Get a structural engineer (P.Eng.) first. → interior-walls (Home Systems)

  • A loose guard or railing is a fall hazard — do not defer. Any movement under a firm push means anchorage has begun to fail. A guard that looks intact but moves provides near-zero protection in an actual fall. Re-anchor or call a carpenter before using the stairs. → stairs-railings (Home Systems)

  • In a strata: notify the strata manager in writing before touching any stain, sag, or water-event damage. If the source is above your unit (common-property pipe, neighbour’s appliance), the strata and the unit above must be involved. Your written notification is also your evidence if a deductible chargeback under SPA s.158 is later disputed. → ceilings (Home Systems), floors (Home Systems)

  • Strata flooring type changes require written council approval before ordering anything. Hard floor over carpet is an alteration under Standard Bylaw 5. Most Metro Vancouver stratas require a minimum IIC/STC rating of 50–55 and a signed Alteration Agreement. Starting without approval can result in forced removal at your cost. → floors (Home Systems)


Component-by-component

ComponentThe one thing to watchOwner vs pro
interior-walls (Home Systems)Crack pattern determines whether you reach for spackle or call an engineer — stair-step and horizontal cracks are structural until proven otherwise; asbestos in joint compound is the invisible hazard in pre-1990 homesDIY: hairline cracks, nail pops, small patches. Pro: structural cracks, hidden moisture, asbestos abatement, plaster in historic homes
floors (Home Systems)Water within 24 hours — every floor type has a 24-hour window before subfloor rot and mould start; the finish floor hides the subfloor damageDIY: routine cleaning, minor spot repairs. Pro: refinishing hardwood, full replacement, asbestos abatement, subfloor rot
ceilings (Home Systems)A ceiling stain is a leak indicator, not a cosmetic problem — trace the source first; painting over an active or recent stain locks in mouldDIY: patch a dry confirmed-source-fixed stain (shellac primer required). Pro: asbestos abatement, sagging sections, mould behind drywall, source unknown
paint-finishes (Home Systems)Match sheen to room moisture level — wrong sheen in bathrooms or kitchens is the dominant cause of early paint failure in BC homes; surface prep is 80% of the resultDIY: virtually all interior painting. Pro: lead abatement (pre-1978 large areas), mould remediation before repaint
trim-molding (Home Systems)Swollen or staining baseboard is a water leak telltale, not a trim problem — find the source first; MDF swells irreversibly when wet so material matters near moistureDIY: caulking, nail-hole filling, painting, simple piece replacement. Pro: large-area replacement, finish carpenter for profile matching
stairs-railings (Home Systems)Guard anchorage is everything — a guard that moves under a firm push provides near-zero fall protection; the 100 mm sphere rule for baluster spacing is a non-negotiable child-safety code requirementDIY: annual load test, re-anchor a simple loose newel. Pro: structural guard replacement, any change to height/design/material (permit required in Vancouver)

Recurring upkeep at a glance

Link all scheduled tasks to Maintenance Calendar (Home Systems).

FrequencyTaskComponent
WeeklySweep/vacuum floors; spot-dry any spills on wood; wipe kitchen/bathroom wallsfloors (Home Systems), paint-finishes (Home Systems)
After every rain or plumbing eventVisual ceiling check — new rings, blistering, or bowingceilings (Home Systems)
Within 24–48 hours of any water eventFloor drying + subfloor check; baseboard inspection for swellingfloors (Home Systems), trim-molding (Home Systems)
AnnuallyWall scan (oblique-light walk-through; photograph and date cracks); guard/handrail load test; caulk gaps on trim; check grout integrity on tile; inspect expansion gaps on LVP/laminateinterior-walls (Home Systems), stairs-railings (Home Systems), trim-molding (Home Systems), floors (Home Systems)
Every 2–3 yearsRepaint high-moisture/high-traffic rooms (kitchens, bathrooms, hallways, kids’ rooms)paint-finishes (Home Systems)
Every 5–7 yearsRepaint living rooms, dining rooms, bedroomspaint-finishes (Home Systems)
Every 7–15 yearsHardwood/engineered floor refinishing (earlier if scratches reach bare wood)floors (Home Systems)
Every 10–15 yearsRegrout tile; reseal natural stone annuallyfloors (Home Systems)
Every 12–18 monthsProfessional carpet steam-cleanfloors (Home Systems)
Before any renovation in a pre-1990 homeAsbestos survey before any sanding, cutting, or scraping of walls, ceilings, or vinyl flooringinterior-walls (Home Systems), ceilings (Home Systems), floors (Home Systems)
Before any sanding in a pre-1978 homeLead paint test — on walls, trim, and railingspaint-finishes (Home Systems), trim-molding (Home Systems), stairs-railings (Home Systems)
After any flooring work near stairsRe-measure riser heights — new tile or carpet can shift the top and bottom stepstairs-railings (Home Systems)
At move-inPhotograph all walls and ceilings (baseline for strata disputes); confirm build year; locate all floor-level water sources; full stair inspectionAll

Biggest-cost / irreversible decisions

These are the scenarios that cross both the irreversible and >$500 thresholds and route to The Decision Lifecycle. Flag these to finance-replacement-reserves (Home Systems).

  • Asbestos abatement (walls, ceilings, vinyl flooring) — irreversible once disturbed; 8,000+ per room depending on material; WorkSafeBC AAL-licensed contractor mandatory. Cannot be deferred if the material is friable or renovation is underway. → interior-walls (Home Systems), ceilings (Home Systems), floors (Home Systems)

  • Lead abatement (large-area, pre-1978 paint) — irreversible work commitment; averages ~$7,500 per home; certified contractor required. Small-area disturb work can be owner-managed with controls; large areas cannot. → paint-finishes (Home Systems)

  • Full floor replacement — typically 12,500+ depending on material and room size; irreversible (old floor removed). In a strata, also requires council approval. → floors (Home Systems)

  • Subfloor replacement due to rot or mould — irreversible structural repair; typically 5,000+. Triggered by any water event that reaches the subfloor before drying starts. → floors (Home Systems)

  • Structural crack repair after engineer assessment — the remediation the engineer identifies may be foundation work at $10,000+. The wall crack is just the messenger. → interior-walls (Home Systems)

  • Full guard/stair rebuild to current code — irreversible scope commitment; typically 15,000+ depending on material and flight length; permit required in Vancouver for any design/material change. → stairs-railings (Home Systems)


Strata vs detached — system-level split

All 6 components are universal (both home types). The strata layer adds:

What’s yours (owner scope): all interior surfaces inside your strata lot boundary — wall faces, floor coverings, ceiling surface, paint, trim, interior unit stairs, and guards serving only your unit. Standard Bylaw 2 places maintenance on the owner.

What’s strata (common property): structural floor/ceiling assembly, shared/demising wall structure, common-area stairs and guards, stairwells, and any guard on a shared balcony or rooftop. SPA s.72 and Standard Bylaw 8 place this on the strata corporation.

The live ambiguity: limited common property (LCP) items — a private staircase entry, an exclusive-use landing, a unit-specific balcony guard — may be owner-maintained even though they are technically common property. Read your registered strata plan and bylaws before doing structural work on anything that isn’t clearly interior-lot-only.

The financial exposure: SPA s.158 allows the strata to charge back its insurance deductible to you if water damage originates in your unit — even without negligence, depending on bylaw wording. Deductibles in Metro Vancouver stratas commonly run 250,000+. The interior surfaces most often involved in such claims are floors (appliance leaks, supply lines) and the ceiling of the unit below.

Strata-specific procedural requirements for this system:

  • Flooring type change → written council approval + IIC/STC rating confirmation before ordering
  • Any renovation touching ceilings in a strata unit with a unit above → notify strata manager in writing first
  • Guard replacement that changes material or design → municipal building permit + strata council approval (two separate approvals)
  • Water event → written notification to strata manager even if damage looks minor

What this brief is NOT

This is a one-screen rollup — a synthesis and prioritization layer, not a reference for doing the work. Each component note holds the full mechanism, discrimination tables, step-by-step maintenance procedures, triangulated pricing tiers, hire-and-verify checklists, and sources. Open the component when you need those.