Category: Building & Properties

  • Nigeria, Saudi Arabia deepen housing development

    Nigeria, Saudi Arabia deepen housing development

    As part of Nigeria’s investor engagement on the sidelines of the 2026 Real Estate Future Forum (RFF 2026) in Riyadh, the Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Ahmed Musa Dangiwa, held a high-level bilateral meeting with the Saudi Arabian Minister of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing (MOMRAH), Majed bin Abdullah Al-Hogail, alongside senior officials of the Ministry.

    During the meeting, Arc. Dangiwa presented Nigeria’s flagship Renewed Hope Housing Programme, highlighting its scale, structured delivery architecture, and strong alignment with private capital.

    He also showcased the Federal Government’s Building Materials Manufacturing Hubs initiative, aimed at accelerating local production, reducing construction costs, creating jobs, and strengthening Nigeria’s construction value chain.

    “Nigeria is positioning housing not just as a social good, but as a major driver of economic growth, industrialisation, and investment,” Dangiwa said.

    “Under the Renewed Hope Housing Programme, we are delivering homes at scale across income segments, supported by clear policies, bankable PPP frameworks, and strong demand fundamentals.”

    He added that Nigeria is actively seeking strategic partnerships with credible Saudi institutions and firms.

    READ ALSO: The men who ruined a republic

     “We are keen to deepen collaboration with the Kingdom through MOMRAH and to be introduced to reputable Saudi developers, manufacturers, financiers, and technology partners who are ready to enter the Nigerian market. Our Building Materials Manufacturing Hubs, in particular, offer a compelling opportunity for Saudi investors to participate in local production and long-term value creation,” the Minister noted.

    In his response, Minister Al-Hogail welcomed Nigeria’s reform-oriented housing agenda and expressed openness to enhanced institutional cooperation between both countries.

     “Saudi Arabia recognises the scale of Nigeria’s housing demand and the seriousness of the reforms being undertaken to unlock private investment,” Minister Al-Hogail said. “There are clear areas of synergy between our housing and urban development objectives, especially in large-scale housing delivery, construction technologies, and local manufacturing.”

    He further noted that MOMRAH would support engagement with relevant Saudi stakeholders.

     “We see value in facilitating connections between Nigerian counterparts and reputable Saudi entities with the experience, capital, and technical capacity to contribute meaningfully to Nigeria’s housing and construction sector,” he added.

    The meeting reinforces Nigeria’s strategy of leveraging global platforms such as RFF 2026 to mobilise investment, share best practices, and forge strategic alliances that accelerate housing delivery and industrial development under the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    The Federal Ministry of Housing and Urban Development will continue follow-up engagements with MOMRAH and prospective Saudi partners to translate the discussions into concrete investment pathways and project-level collaborations in Nigeria.

  • Firm, Kwara govt to provide affordable housing

    Firm, Kwara govt to provide affordable housing

    An Ilorin, Kwara State-based property firm, DaatHomes Investment Ltd, has extended a hand of partnership to Kwara State Government to provide quality and affordable housing to residents.

    It said it had plans to build 5,000 bungalows in the next five years in states across the country.

    Founders of the firm, Atolagbe Daniel and Ifeoluwa Sanusi, told The Nation in an exclusive interview in Ilorin.

    They lamented that funding was the major constraint affecting upcoming small businesses in the nation.

    Daniel said: “We hope to work with the state government in the provision of affordable housing for the masses in very suitable location in the state and across the country.

    READ ALSO: The men who ruined a republic

    “We need partnership with the state government, as we are looking into providing 5,000 bungalows in the next five years. But our major constraint is funding. With the help of government and other investors, we will be able to deliver the project.

    “We also hope to approach the banks to raise funds in order to deliver to clients, quality, best and affordable homes. Our major goal is to ensure shelter for all at affordable rate.”

    He said the property firm had delivered at least three estates in Ilorin and its environs.

    “God has been faithful to us. We have been able to deliver at least three estates in the course of establishment of this company. The estates are Crystal, Future and Itunu in Oke-Oyi, Ilorin outskirts.”

    Sanusi said based on the company’s track record, clients would not be disappointed.

    “We have strategies and plans in place to provide quality and affordable housing in the state and by extension, Nigeria. We are assuring the masses that based on our future projects, they will get the best through the due diligence we have carried out,” he added.

  • Lagos urges owned-estate allottees to insure homes

    Lagos urges owned-estate allottees to insure homes

    Lagos State Government yesterday called on allottees of government-owned housing estates to ensure regular annual payment of insurance dues.

    It said the insurance payment was not a one-off payment, adding that the payment ensured risk of loss during disaster and unforeseen emergency situations was mitigated.

    Commissioner for Housing Moruf Akinderu-Fatai said government investment through the provision of world-class facilities, as well as individual and collective assets of residents of government-owned estates must be protected against risk, with compulsory insurance subscription.

    He spoke while receiving LASACO Insurance team led by the Managing Director, Ademoye Shobo, on a visit to the Ministry of Housing.

    The commissioner, represented by the Permanent Secretary, Abdulhafis Toriola, congratulated Shobo on his appointment and hailed LASACO for “seeking honest feedback and deeper engagement with the ministry.”

    READ ALSO: Critical success factors for Nigeria’s economy this year

    He commended the company for its “openness to feedback, continuous collaboration, transparency, and accountability, which are essential to improving service delivery and protecting the interest of Lagos State.”

    The ministry agreed to a deployment of technology-driven system leveraging API integration and data collaboration.

    The system, he said, would enable the ministry to easily identify home unit allottees, who had insured their properties and those who had not, thereby strengthening compliance, monitoring and risk management.

    Shobo informed the management of the Ministry of Housing that the visit was to introduce the new management and reinforce relationships with key stakeholders.

    He said: ‘’It also provided an opportunity for the LASACO Managing Director to express the company’s appreciation to the ministry for its consistent support and for safeguarding the interests of Lagos State in critical insurance engagements”.

    He commended the ministry for ensuring insurance portfolios linked to the state remained within LASACO, a company with significant Lagos State investment, noting that such actions were vital to protecting public investments and ensuring sustainable returns for the state.

    Shobo highlighted LASACO’s proven technical capacity and financial strength in managing large-scale risks for Federal Government and Lagos State, reiterating that insurance was fundamentally about risk transfer and risk sharing.

    He reaffirmed LASACO’s longstanding reputation for professionalism, noting that the company had consistently maintained the highest number of professionals in the Nigerian insurance industry for over two decades.

    The meeting also served as a platform for constructive engagement between the ministry officials and LASACO on how to better manage contractor’s bond liabilities, delivery timelines and project management process.

    LASACO managing director assured the ministry of improved collaboration and responsiveness going forward.

     “Whenever there is a valid loss, LASACO will always honour its obligations. Our record in claims settlement reflects our commitment to accountability, professionalism and trust,” he said.

  • Widening housing deficit worries govt

    Widening housing deficit worries govt

    The Federal Government has expressed a deep concern on the widening housing deficit ravaging the country, urging the built industry to engage constructively and advance implementable recommendations capable of strengthening land governance, revitalising Nigerian cities and reducing the housing deficit.

    Speaking at the opening of the 14th Meeting of the National Housing Council in Kwara State, Director of Planning, Research and Statistics (PRS) of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, Muhktar Umar, urged the industrialists to develop implementable policies aimed at producing effective land management and administration.

    He also called for national land governance frameworks; promotion of local building materials and technologies; urban renewal and regeneration; public–private partnerships; and innovative housing finance strategies.

    Furthermore, he stressed the need to engage constructively, share best practices, and advance implementable recommendations capable of strengthening land governance, revitalising Nigerian cities, reducing the housing deficit, and improving citizens’ quality of life.

    READ ALSO; Arewa, this has to stop

    In a statement, Umar stated that the council meeting should reaffirm the Federal Government’s commitment to inclusive engagement, co-operative federalism, and evidence-driven policymaking as essential pillars for addressing the nation’s housing and urban development challenges.

     “The meeting brings together critical stakeholders in the housing sector to chart a sustainable path for housing delivery, urban development, land administration and management in Nigeria,

    “It represents the apex advisory body for the sector and draws participation from the commissioners, permanent secretaries, directors, state surveyors-general, and other key actors in the built environment across the federation.

     “The theme for the meeting is ‘Achieving Housing Delivery and Sustainable Cities through Effective Land Management, Urban Renewal, Promotion of Local Building Materials, and Public–Private Partnerships in Nigeria,” the statement explained

    The theme, according to the Director, PRS, reflects the urgent national imperative to respond holistically to rapid urbanisation, population growth, climate change impacts, and Nigeria’s widening housing deficit through innovative and practical solutions.

     “The sessions will focus on deliberations over critical sectoral issues, consideration of memoranda submitted by states and stakeholders, review of the implementation status of resolutions from the 13th Council Meeting held in Gombe, and refinement of policy proposals for higher-level review” the statement noted.

    Kwara State Commissioner for Housing and Urban Development, Dr. Segun Ogunsola noted that the theme of the council meeting is apt as it aligns with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    Meanwhile, the 14th National Council on Lands, Housing and Urban Development is expected to produce far-reaching resolutions that will guide policy direction and implementation across all tiers of government in the sector.

  • 15.2m housing units structurally defective

    15.2m housing units structurally defective

    The Federal Government has revealed that about 15.2 million housing units across Nigeria are structurally inadequate, raising fresh concerns about safety, habitability, and access to basic services nationwide.

    The disclosure was made by the Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Ahmed Musa Dangiwa, in a statement yesterday.

    According to the minister, the affected homes physically exist but fail to meet minimum standards for safety, durability, decent living conditions, and access to essential infrastructure such as water, sanitation, and electricity.

    Dangiwa explained that the findings were produced under the National Housing Data Initiative and presented by the National Housing Data Technical Committee in Abuja.

    He noted that Nigeria’s housing challenge extends beyond the shortage of new homes and includes widespread structural inadequacy in existing buildings.

    The assessment, he said, applied internationally recognised tools such as the Household Crowding Index, Adequate Housing Index, and Composite Index Methodology, using data from the National Population Commission (NPC), National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), and other housing institutions, in line with World Bank standards.

    Dangiwa said the harmonised approach now allows the government to state with confidence the scale of housing inadequacy across the country.

    He stressed that addressing the challenge will require more than constructing new houses, urging a focus on upgrading existing housing stock, regenerating deteriorating neighbourhoods, and improving infrastructure and public services.

    READ ALSO; Farouk Ahmed: A challenge for EFCC

    The minister added that housing inadequacy is also linked to affordability gaps, limited access to land, weak housing finance systems, and significant regional disparities.

    From the data made available to The Nation Data, the assessment showed that Kano State recorded the highest level of housing inadequacy, while Bayelsa State recorded the lowest, based on the Adequate Housing Index.

    As part of efforts to address the problem, the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development has begun steps to establish a National Housing Data Centre, which will support policymaking, housing finance access, investment planning, and large-scale housing delivery.

    The Data Centre is expected to improve planning accuracy, boost investor confidence, and strengthen accountability in the housing market. It is projected to become operational by mid-January 2026.

    The minister noted that the Federal Government is currently implementing housing interventions under the Renewed Hope Estates and Cities Programme, with projects at various stages of completion nationwide.

    Renewed Hope Cities are large-scale developments planned across the six geopolitical zones and the Federal Capital Territory, implemented through public-private partnerships.

    Renewed Hope Estates, on the other hand, consist of smaller housing clusters of about 250 units, funded directly by the Federal Government, with state governments providing land and subsidised infrastructure to improve affordability.

    Despite these initiatives, Dangiwa said Nigeria still faces a severe housing deficit, noting that closing the gap would require at least 550,000 new housing units annually, at an estimated cost of ₦5.5 trillion over the next decade.

  • NICON Town residents urge court on trial over land

    NICON Town residents urge court on trial over land

    A procedural clash has emerged in the protracted land ownership dispute in NICON Town Estate, Lekki, as residents and plot owners urged a Lagos State High Court to reject the originating summons filed by Harris Dredging Limited and Nicon Town Management Company Plc.

    The plot allottees prayed the court presided by Justice Olukayode Ogunjobi to convert the suit into a writ of summons to allow full pleadings and oral evidence.

    READ ALSO: Why I apologised to Afeez Owo – Wumi Toriola

    The defendants comprising the Incorporated Trustees of the NICON Town Residents and Plot Owners’ Association and 14 individual homeowners told the court sitting at Tafawa Balewa Square(TBS) that the claimants’ chosen procedure is unsuitable for a dispute steeped in allegations of fraud, conflicting documents, disputed authority and competing historical claims to the land.

    Harris Dredging and NTMC instituted Suit marked LD/5141/LM/2024, against the 15 defendants, seeking confirmation of Harris Dredging’s title to a 5,899.31sqm parcel of land located within the Community Centre Zone of NICON Town.

    They also asked the court to declare that their 2010 Deed of Sub-Lease, registered as Instrument No. 76/76/2349 at the Lagos State Land Registry, remains valid and enforceable.

  • Dangiwa makes case for 3% budgetary allocation for land titling

    Dangiwa makes case for 3% budgetary allocation for land titling

    The Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Ahmed Musa Dangiwa, has urged state governments to dedicate between one and three per cent of their annual budgets to land administration and systematic land titling.

    He said credible land governance is the country’s strongest lever for building a trillion-dollar economy.

    Dangiwa made the call in a keynote address at the opening of the 30th Conference of Directors of Lands in the Federal and States’ Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).

    “I strongly recommend and charge that Nigerian State Governments ring-fence between 1 and 3 per cent of their annual budgets for land administration and systematic titling during the reform and scaling phase,” he stated.

    The theme for the 30th Conference is ‘Nigeria Land Titling, Registration and Documentation Programme (NLTRDP): Implementation Mission’

    Dangiwa explained that international evidence shows very clearly that ministries responsible for land administration around the world operate on about one per cent of the total public budget.

    He said “ based on these global benchmarks and our own national realities … a sustainable allocation of 0.5 to 1 per cent will be sufficient to maintain digital registries, continue systematic documentation, and keep the cadastre up to date”

    READ ALSO; No Boko Haram suspects held in Lagos, CP Jimoh

    The Minister further stated that half of the allocation must go directly to real service delivery- systematic titling, digitisation, modern registries, surveys and dispute-resolution-not vehicles, furniture or overheads.

    “If we spend on impact, not overheads, every state will unlock revenue, citizens will gain secure property rights, and land will become a true economic asset, not dead capital. And let me say this confidently: the success of the Land4Growth Programme is Nigeria’s surest bet to achieving the $1 trillion economy,” he remarked

    Accordingly, Dangiwa stated that land becomes bankable when citizens can use it for credit, when investors trust the registry, and when states earn sustainable revenue from property markets.

    He said: “We will unlock growth on a scale that can transform our national economy. That is how land becomes wealth, and how this sector can power Nigeria’s economic future.”

    The Minister further disclosed that in the last World Bank Doing Business ranking on Registering Property, Nigeria performed poorly due to excessive procedures, long timelines, and high costs, which create uncertainty for investors and unnecessary hardship for citizens.

    He noted the identical challenges across the states as complex manual workflows, fragmented and outdated paper records, corruption risks, tenure insecurity for vulnerable groups, and very low revenue collection despite huge potential.

    Dangiwa also told the participants that under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, land administration will be treated not as routine bureaucracy but as a strategic economic reform, adding that government had begun to translate the commitment into concrete action.

    “ I have directed the Director Lands to make sure every Director has a copy of the Concept Note and Framework. Embrace it and properly guide your State Governments to adopt it and work with us at the Federal level to implement it,” Dangiwa said.

    The Minister, however, said: “ We are not yet where we want to be, but we are certainly not where we were last year. We are moving – and we are moving with purpose

    “We have within this period introduced the Nigeria Land Titling, Registration and Documentation Programme (Land4Growth) to unlock an estimated $300 billion in dead capital, and are finalizing a partnership with the World Bank and state governments to register, document, and title land nationwide.”

    Earlier in his opening remarks, the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, Dr. Shaiub Belgore, stated that the annual Conference of Directors of Lands has served as a key platform for professional exchange over the years.

    He said: “ As we mark the 30th edition, it is important that this gathering does not remain a yearly talk shop. The true value of this conference will not be measured in speeches, communiqués or photographs, but in how the knowledge gained here is translated into practical reforms in your States.”

  • ‘Efficient land administration remains engine of growth’

    ‘Efficient land administration remains engine of growth’

    By Adedeji Ogunwolu

    Land is the silent force behind every nation’s prosperity. It hosts homes, industries, farms, markets, schools, and infrastructure. It is the canvas upon which development is painted and the bedrock upon which modern economies stand.

    But land, on its own, has no power. Its true value emerges only when the systems that govern its ownership, use, transfer, and development function with clarity and efficiency. This is where land administration—the framework of policies, institutions, regulations, and processes for managing land—becomes an engine of national growth.

    Across the world, developed nations exhibit one striking commonality: well-structured land administration systems. Whether it is Singapore’s digital land registry, the United Kingdom’s transparent title system, Rwanda’s revolutionary land reforms, or the United States’ robust property rights framework, effective land governance consistently correlates with economic prosperity. When land rights are secure, investments flow; when land transactions are predictable, innovation thrives; and when land is efficiently managed, cities expand in an orderly, productive manner.

    Nigeria, like many developing countries, sits on vast economic potential buried within its land resources. Yet this potential remains largely underutilised because the mechanisms for land management often slow rather than stimulate development. Titles are difficult to obtain, records are incomplete, bureaucracy is excessive, and disputes are frequent. Land that could be an asset often becomes a liability. Developers lose time, investors lose confidence, and the government loses revenue.

    But the story does not have to remain this way. Land administration, when properly reformed and effectively implemented, can transform into one of the most powerful engines of economic growth and social transformation. It can unlock housing development, stimulate agricultural productivity, expand infrastructure, enhance environmental management, and energise industrial growth.

    To appreciate the strategic importance of land administration, one must first understand how deeply land ties into economic systems. In agriculture, secure land rights encourage farmers to invest in improved seeds, irrigation, and mechanisation.

    READ ALSO; NELFUND’s disbursements hit N116b for students’ fees, upkeeps

    In housing, a clear title is often the first requirement for financing, construction, and long-term development planning. In industrial expansion, land availability and ease of acquisition determine the speed of manufacturing growth. Even digital economies rely on physical infrastructure—data centres, communication masts, logistics hubs—all anchored on land.

    Where land administration is efficient, economic activities flourish. Investors gain confidence in the market, knowing their rights are protected by law and supported by verifiable records. Banks expand mortgage and credit facilities, knowing they can rely on collateral that is legally recognized and easily enforceable. Government expands its revenue base through property taxes, land use charges, and transaction fees, using these funds to build roads, schools, hospitals, and utilities.

    The reverse is equally true. When land governance is weak, conflicting claims proliferate, court cases multiply, and development slows to a crawl. Investors pull back, costs escalate, and communities suffer. Nigeria’s experience painfully illustrates this.

    A real estate developer seeking land for housing may spend months navigating approvals. A farmer may struggle to access credit because her land is informally held and cannot serve as collateral. A factory owner may face uncertainty because titles are inconsistent or incomplete. The economy, in such a climate, cannot reach its full potential.

    Reforming land administration is therefore not just a policy necessity—it is an economic imperative.

    One of the most critical components of an effective land administration system is digitization. Modern land governance depends on accurate, accessible, tamper-proof records. Countries that have successfully transitioned to digital land registries have witnessed dramatic improvements in transparency, efficiency, and public trust.

    Digital maps, electronic titles, and online verification processes remove the opacity that often fuels corruption and delays. For Nigeria, where many land records remain paper-based or fragmented across agencies, digitization is the gateway to unlocking billions of dollars in dormant land value.

    Equally important is the simplification of land acquisition and approval processes. Investors should not have to navigate labyrinthine procedures or engage multiple agencies to obtain a title, consent, or building approval. A streamlined, predictable process reduces transaction costs and accelerates development. State governments must adopt one-stop approval systems, eliminating unnecessary steps and ensuring that all relevant agencies collaborate seamlessly rather than hinder each other.

    Another vital aspect is security of tenure. People invest when they know the land they occupy cannot suddenly be reclaimed without due process or fair compensation. Secure tenure is more than physical possession—it is legal certainty. Governments must therefore work to strengthen title verification, resolve disputes swiftly, and update cadastral maps regularly. Efficient land dispute resolution mechanisms—such as specialised land tribunals—can drastically reduce the delays that encumber courts and impede development.

    Land valuation is also central to effective administration. A transparent and standardized valuation system ensures fairness in taxation, compensation, and investment decisions. Estate surveyors and valuers, in particular, play a crucial role in enhancing land markets by providing credible asset valuations, assessing compensation for acquisitions, and guiding public and private-sector transactions. Their expertise contributes directly to the economic stability and reliability of the land sector.

    But beyond administrative processes, land also holds enormous potential for wealth creation. In many advanced economies, land accounts for a significant portion of household wealth and national capital. Property ownership enables families to accumulate assets, build credit history, and pass wealth across generations. A functional land administration system, therefore, strengthens not only national prosperity but also individual and household economic empowerment.

    Urban development is another dimension where land administration drives growth. Without proper land planning, cities expand in chaotic, inefficient ways that strain infrastructure and diminish the quality of life. Effective administration ensures that land is allocated for roads, drainage, green spaces, electricity corridors, schools, markets, and public services. It prevents indiscriminate development and promotes orderly growth. Lagos, Abuja, and other rapidly expanding cities require strong land governance to optimize land use and prevent the rise of slums and congested neighbourhoods.

    Rural development also hinges on efficient land governance. Clear land rights encourage investment in agriculture and agribusiness, support rural credit markets, and empower farmers to modernise production. Land consolidation programs, formalised titles, and agricultural land banks can reduce fragmentation and boost productivity.

    Environmental sustainability is yet another dimension. Land administration governs zoning, environmental protection, setbacks, floodplain management, and waste disposal. By ensuring that land use aligns with ecological realities, governments can prevent disasters, protect natural resources, and promote climate-resilient development.

    To fully transform land administration into an engine of growth, several strategies are essential:

    First, adopt comprehensive land reform policies that prioritise transparency, digital transformation, and institutional efficiency.

    Second, invest heavily in capacity building for surveyors, valuers, planners, and land officers—professionals whose expertise is vital to a modern land sector.

    Third, embrace public-private partnerships to fund digitisation, infrastructure mapping, and efficient land information systems.

    Fourth, engage communities in land decisions, ensuring that reforms are socially inclusive and culturally sensitive.

    Finally, enforce accountability at every level of land governance to eliminate corruption, favouritism, and manipulation of land records.

    The potential gains are enormous. With improved land administration, Nigeria can attract more foreign direct investment, expand its housing stock, strengthen agricultural resilience, develop its industrial hubs, grow its mortgage market, and boost government revenue. The multiplier effects would cut across every sector of the economy.

    Land is more than soil—it is an opportunity. It is the foundation upon which cities rise, industries grow, and families build their futures. When land administration functions effectively, development becomes inevitable. It becomes easier to build homes, secure investments, expand agriculture, plan urban spaces, and manage resources sustainably. In simple terms, a nation’s ability to prosper rests heavily on how well it manages its land.

    Nigeria stands at a moment when bold reforms are needed to unleash economic potential. Strengthening land administration would not only enhance governance but also ignite growth across housing, agriculture, manufacturing, and infrastructure. It would deepen financial markets, expand wealth creation, and nurture urban and rural transformation.

    Land administration, therefore, is not a bureaucratic exercise—it is a strategic engine of growth. It is the quiet power behind national competitiveness and the hidden catalyst for economic development. A future of prosperity is possible, but it begins with the soil beneath our feet. When land is well managed, the nation flourishes. When it is poorly governed, development stalls.

    If Nigeria chooses the path of reform, modernisation, and transparency, land can become the nation’s most powerful tool for inclusive and sustainable development.

  • SGOF, states surveyors move to reclaim land administration from non-professionals

    SGOF, states surveyors move to reclaim land administration from non-professionals

    ‎The Surveyor General of the Federation (SGOF), Surv. Abduganiyu Adeyemi Adebomehin and the Forum of States Surveyor General of Nigeria (FOSSGON) have taken a united stand to reposition the nation’s land administration, GIS systems, and mapping architecture, declaring that survey professionals, not non-technical actors, must take full control of Nigeria’s geospatial data.

    ‎During a meeting held on Friday at the Office of the Surveyor General of the Federation in Abuja, Adebomehin called for a sweeping structural reform that would bring state Surveyors General into the federal decision-making framework.

    ‎Adebomehin disclosed that OSGOF is preparing critical submissions to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on the future of digital mapping, land management, and GIS.

    ‎He said the ongoing Abuja digital mapping, which has captured thousands of housing units already, proves the financial and developmental returns of geospatial investment.

    ‎He urged state surveyors to begin formal engagement with their governors ahead of a nationwide digital-twin mapping initiative.

    ‎He revealed that OSGOF has undergone advanced training with Chinese experts on digital-twin technologies that recognise African building types.

    READ ALSO: NIIA, Korean Embassy seek deeper economic cooperation between Nigeria, Korea

    ‎“We are ready for Abuja’s second-phase digital-twin mapping. Our next target is to map the entire country using aircraft. Nigeria must build its own capacity,” he said.

    ‎Surv. Duniya Magaji, Head of Geodesy at OSGOF, thanked FOSSGON for their continuous support, describing the growing federal–state synergy as vital for national development.

    ‎Also speaking, Surv. Charity Michael of the Federal Capital Development Authority hailed Adebomehin for building what she called a lasting professional legacy. She renewed calls for survey offices to be upgraded to extra-ministerial departments, including in the FCT, warning that non-survey professionals in GIS units continue to mishandle sensitive data.

    ‎“Land administration must remain in the hands of surveyors. What many states currently operate is not holistic GIS,” she insisted.

    ‎FOSSGON Chairman and Adamawa State Surveyor General, Surv. Pwavidon Simon led the delegation and praised the renewed national relevance of OSGOF under Adebomehin.

    ‎“We are here to celebrate your leadership and the confidence President Tinubu has placed in you. OSGOF is again shaping national policy, especially in infrastructure development,” he said.

    ‎Osun State Surveyor General, Surv. Soladoye Abioye congratulated Adebomehin on his tenure extension and OSGOF’s elevation to the Presidency.

    ‎Abioye appealed for the urgent restoration of the Surveyors Council of Nigeria (SURCON), noting that its absence has halted professional examinations and weakened regulatory oversight. He also urged stronger collaboration between federal agencies and state survey offices to minimise boundary disputes.

  • Unlocking development through housing infrastructure

    Unlocking development through housing infrastructure

    By Adedeji Jubril Ogunwolu

    Housing is more than shelter. It is the bedrock of human dignity, the platform upon which economic productivity is built, and the strongest indicator of a nation’s development trajectory. Across the world, the quality and availability of housing infrastructure often mirror the level of social progress within any society.

    In Nigeria, however, the housing sector has long stood at a critical intersection—between persistent challenges and immense untapped opportunities. As the nation continues to grapple with rapid urbanization, population expansion, and infrastructural deficits, housing has emerged not merely as a social service but as a strategic tool for unlocking broad-based development.

    For decades, Nigeria’s housing deficit has hovered around 20 million units by various estimates, a figure that reflects deep-rooted structural issues. Yet behind this deficit lies something more profound: a barrier standing in the way of economic transformation. When housing infrastructure fails, everything else falters, such as public health, productivity, family stability, urban planning, and even national cohesion. Conversely, when housing thrives, communities flourish, investments accelerate, and economies expand. The key, therefore, to unlocking Nigeria’s next phase of development is not hidden in abstract economic theories, but in the practical, tangible reality of improved housing infrastructure.

    At the heart of this challenge is the persistent mismatch between demand and supply. Urban centres like Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Ibadan, and Kano continue to witness massive inflows of people seeking employment and a better quality of life. Yet, the availability of affordable and decent housing has not kept pace. Private developers focus largely on the upper-income segment where returns are high, while the middle and low-income earners, who make up the overwhelming majority, are left with inadequate options. Informal settlements continue to sprout, lacking basic services such as water, drainage, sanitation, electricity, and road access.

    READ ALSO: NIIA, Korean Embassy seek deeper economic cooperation between Nigeria, Korea

    But the absence of adequate housing is not just a social inconvenience; it is an economic bottleneck. Poor housing conditions breed health crises, reduce workforce productivity, escalate urban insecurity, and inflate government expenditure on emergency interventions. Any nation serious about attaining sustainable development must therefore treat housing infrastructure as a central economic pillar. Housing must move from a peripheral policy concern to a top priority in the national development strategy.

    The economic value chain of housing is vast and transformative. Construction stimulates demand for building materials such as cement, steel, tiles, timber, and paint—much of which can be locally produced, creating manufacturing jobs and supporting ancillary industries. Skilled and unskilled labour alike benefit from employment opportunities generated by housing development. Financial institutions expand their loan portfolios through mortgage financing, while state and local governments enhance revenue through property taxation. Even the informal economy, including artisans, transporters, and small-scale suppliers, experiences a positive ripple effect.

    Thus, when housing construction accelerates, the economy gains momentum. The multiplier effect is well-documented: for every home built, at least six different economic sectors are stimulated. In advanced economies, housing contributes significantly to GDP growth; Nigeria cannot be an exception. If properly harnessed, housing infrastructure could become one of the strongest levers for economic diversification, reducing reliance on the oil sector and promoting inclusive growth.

    Yet, for this to happen, housing must be approached with innovation, financing reform, and purposeful governance. Nigeria’s outdated land administration system remains one of the greatest impediments to housing development.

    The process of acquiring land, securing titles, and obtaining development approvals is often fraught with delays, high costs, and bureaucratic bottlenecks. For developers, time is money. For aspiring homeowners, these obstacles translate into unbearable financial burdens and prolonged uncertainty.

    Reforming land administration is therefore essential. Digital land registries, simplified consent procedures, transparent valuation processes, and well-structured land banks are critical to unlocking investment in housing. Government must move from merely regulating space to proactively enabling development. Policies must be redesigned to lower the cost and complexity of acquiring land, while also ensuring efficient dispute resolution mechanisms.

    Financing is another critical barrier. Nigeria’s mortgage market remains shallow, with high interest rates, short tenors, and limited eligibility frameworks. Most Nigerians cannot afford traditional mortgage arrangements that require 20–25 percent interest rates and 10-year repayment windows. The result is a nation of renters and informal builders, where individuals construct homes incrementally over 10–20 years—far slower than national population growth.

    To overcome this, Nigeria must adopt creative financing models. Public-private partnerships (PPPs), cooperative housing schemes, rent-to-own initiatives, employer-assisted housing, diaspora investment platforms, and state-backed mortgage guarantees offer viable paths forward. Countries such as Singapore, South Africa, Morocco, and Malaysia have demonstrated that affordable housing becomes feasible when the government plays a catalytic role by providing land, incentives, infrastructure, and long-term financing structures.

    Urban renewal is equally important in this conversation. Many Nigerian cities are growing horizontally rather than vertically, leading to sprawl, congestion, environmental degradation, and inefficient land use. Strategic urban renewal projects can reverse this trend by redeveloping blighted neighbourhoods into modern, mixed-use communities equipped with essential services. Such efforts not only uplift living standards but also unlock economic vibrancy within urban centres. Lagos, for example, has immense potential for smart, high-density housing solutions that maximize space while improving infrastructure delivery.

    Furthermore, housing is fundamental to social stability. Secure and decent housing strengthens family life, enhances educational outcomes for children, and improves mental well-being. When families live in overcrowded, unsafe, or unsanitary environments, social tension rises, and crime often increases. A society’s peace and harmony depend heavily on how its citizens live. Investing in housing is therefore an investment in social cohesion.

    But the conversation must also address sustainability. The future of housing lies in environmentally responsible construction—using materials and technologies that reduce carbon emissions, improve energy efficiency, and minimize waste.

    The world is moving towards green buildings, solar-powered estates, environmentally conscious designs, and climate-resilient infrastructure. Nigeria, facing climate risks such as flooding and extreme heat, must incorporate these global best practices into its housing policy framework. Sustainable housing not only protects the environment but also reduces long-term costs for residents.

    To unlock development through housing infrastructure, stakeholders at all levels must align their efforts. Government must provide enabling policies and infrastructure; private developers must embrace affordability and innovation; financial institutions must expand mortgage access; professional bodies such as estate surveyors, planners, architects, and engineers must uphold global standards; while communities must be actively involved in planning and maintaining their environments.

    Ultimately, the path to national development runs through the homes of its people. No nation can prosper when its citizens live in conditions that diminish their health, dignity, productivity, and aspirations. Housing is the physical foundation upon which all other dimensions of development are built. It shapes the way people learn, work, socialize, and dream. It determines the level of investment a city attracts, the quality of life it delivers, and the pace of growth it achieves.

    Nigeria stands today at a turning point. The journey toward sustainable development will not be driven solely by oil revenue, infrastructure megaprojects, or economic reforms. It will be shaped by the quality, accessibility, and effectiveness of the housing infrastructure built for its people. Housing is not just a product; it is a catalyst. It is not just architecture; it is opportunity. It is not just shelter; it is a national transformation waiting to happen.

    Unlocking development through housing infrastructure is therefore not an option; it is an imperative. It is the key to a more prosperous, equitable, and resilient Nigeria. And if embraced with vision, innovation, and commitment, it holds the power to reshape the nation’s future.

    – Adedeji Jubril Ogunwolu is an Estate Surveyor and Valuer. He wrote from Lagos