Mr Elliott quizzed the engineer, who was working for Holmes Consulting Group, on why he didn't carry out a more detailed inspection of the building.
Whiteside said his remit was to carry out a basic visual inspection of the building, or Level 2 examination.
He admitted to having not checked previous reports carried out on the building by his own employers, Holmes Consulting, which highlighted structural weaknesses and featured modelled performances of the building.
Whiteside said his own "visual" checks meant he was satisfied he did not have to recommend a more detailed report, which would have closed the building and paved the way for more "invasive" inspections.
He argued that his own observations of cracks in the building's walls had not amounted to a "significantly diminished building capacity."
Mr Elliott asked whether during Mr Whiteside's first inspection on September 7 he carried out his duties without information from GNS Science, reference to building plans or any previous reports held on Holmes Consulting Group's file, and without invasive testing of the sheer core, or any understanding of the extent of reinforcing in the sheer core.
"Is that right?" the bewildered lawyer inquired.
"That would be correct, yes," the engineer replied.
Mr Elliott asked that given those "deficiencies in information," did he still think it was "open to say that it was OK to occupy structurally?"
Whiteside said: "In the scope of what we were doing, which was an initial assessment to see if the building had any diminished capacity, I believe it was."
Tenants and workers inside the PGC building had discovered cracks "which caused concern and led them to press for another report after the Boxing Day 4.9-magnitude quake. But again, Whiteside told them it was "green stickered" and safe to occupy.
The hearing continues.