Category: Building & Properties

  • ‘Economy is hindering ability to own houses’

    ‘Economy is hindering ability to own houses’

    Is affordable housing possible under the prevailing economic reality? For those in government, the answer is no! According to Jide Ogunsholu, Ogun State Property Investment Corporation (OPIC) Managing Director and Special Adviser to the Governor on Property and Investments, it is difficult to build a house for N2 million in the face of current realities. He tells MUYIWA LUCAS that with developments in his state, there is hope for affordable housing.

    For an average Nigerian, getting an affordable house is paramount.What is OPIC’s effort in this direction?

    What we have done is to put in place flexible schemes that make it easier for people to acquire our homes. That is why we have  the ‘OPIC Advantage Plan.’ This is not a mortgage plan, but a financing plan that allows you to spread the course of acquisition over a three to four year period. A lot of people struggle to build their own house in our country; most of such people buy land in the first year; save money and do the foundation in the second year; and in the third year, they complete the building and call everybody to a party. Nobody builds over less than three years in this country. This is a typical Nigerian style of building especially where the owner is not rich. So, for such category of people, what we have done is that instead of the person bearing all the burden, we (OPIC) will build in one year, and allow the person to pay over an extended period of time. That is what OPIC is all about- targeting an extended period of time for housing payment to make it easy for the people. We believe that easily within the Lagos – Ogun market axis, we have over 200,000 people that fall into this category. For people in this category, affordability is about how to pay, not what to pay. That is a smaller market.

    For the larger market, it is about cost and how to pay, which is where we are bringing in people like Lafarge Holcim and other banks. We enter into an agreement with firms like Lafarge and use them to build houses for us. We can pay in installments over an agreed period of time; we can spread the payment a bit and we can get some form of credit from their system. This makes us to get construction done at a reduced rate and by getting it at a reduced rate, we are able to get those buildings to the aspiring owner at reduced price. We are aware this effort is still not enough but we now think the last step is aggregating some mortgage banks, who we are working with now, to create a product that will make it possible for such people to get facilities. Once they key into the scheme and they show over a period of time that they are reliable and can be depended on to pay as and  when due in a 20-year mortgage loan, then we as OPIC come in to work with everybody to make it viable.

    Our goal is to try and get cost of houses as low as possible. In New Makun City, located in Shagamu interchange, if it is possible, we want to get N2 million as construction cost for our houses. But let’s be candid, people want to build houses of N2 million, but this is not possible. Government doesn’t have unlimited resources now. Ogun State is fortunate in having a number of agencies working together on different housing schemes; so that is why we have been able to subsidise.

    How can housing cost be reduced?

    Introducing a multi-level unit apartment into the system would reduce cost. But from survey we conducted, we were shocked that the market doesn’t want that because our people still have that cultural thing of everybody wanting his own separate space.  We tried to educate people that the space they are talking about will make the house more expensive. If you are talking affordable housing then you are talking commercial transactions where you make it viable, so that is a challenge. I know that Lafarge has done a lot of work trying to simplify cost of construction, by bringing in form works and aggregates to reduce construction cost, but if you aggregate all of that together, there is no way as of today where you can get a house for less than N2.5 million, excluding profit and all other elements.

    OPIC is the business arm of government. Does this presuppose that social housing is closed to your Corporation?

    Well, of the four agencies that work in Ogun State, Housing Corporation does social housing, and now they do government subsidised housing. We, as OPIC, deliver dividends to government; while the other three agencies get subsidies from government. These are two different things. So if the government decides that for this year she wants to spend N200 million subsidising housing, the first set of people that can access that kind of money is Housing Corporation and Ministry of Housing, which takes care of public building. Housing Corporation takes care of subsidised social housing. For instance, in Abeokuta, we have 160 housing units at Laderin workers’ estate, which is a new estate just built by the government comprising of 2-3 bedroom semi-detached bungalows. The cheapest unit there is sold at about N3.5 million to N4 million. However, on each unit sold at that price, government subsidy is at least N2 million. So if you remove the government subsidy, it is actually N5.5 or N6 million.

    In your quest to provide housing for the people, are you considering rent-to-own scheme as an option?

    Yes, we will probably go into the rent-to-own space probably when we are done with the first face of EMTR gardens. One of the things we have noticed is that the element of the rent-to-own is also characteristics in the OPIC advantaged scheme. This literally means you pay 30 per cent of the total cost of the house, take your keys and you move in and every month you are required to pay a fixed minimum sum and then you have bullet payment points along the line over a 36 month period, with no interest elements.  What we have done with OPIC advantage is to take the characteristics of rent-to-own scheme and characteristics of a typical housing loan and bundle them together to make it affordable. Our sister agencies like Housing Corporation, have variance of their own models that work but not as elaborate as this one because we are the ones that interface mostly with the commercial end of the market, but they also have schemes modelled to make it affordable and flexible for people.

    So, how many units do you propose to have and how do you intend to build them?

    Well, the first face of New Makun City is 400 hectares; 50 per cent is meant to be commercial and the other 50 per cent residential. Within the residential phase what we have also done is to partner with some developers, who come in to pay for the plots to do commercial housing, we have about three of them. We have also agreed with every partner in the scheme on their house pricing and the kind of houses they are to build. Reason is to encourage cross cooperation and to avoid cannibalising each other’s market. Between the interventions, we intend to have a minimum of 2,000 units in all within this first phase. We are responsible for building a minimum of 500 units on our own which is going to be mostly in the lower entry level. What we really want in New Makun City is to get to a point where entry level homes does not exceed N8 million instead of the N15 million we are selling now. We are looking at over the next year or two for 50 per cent reduction in the prices.

    How has the crashing naira impacted on your projects?

    Well there is a direct impact because the prices of building materials tend to fluctuate; but the flip side is somewhat good, because in the housing market if we look inward we can source many things locally. So one of the good things of working with Lafarge is that everything, except for the frame work, is sourced locally. We really don’t have any imports other than the pipes, because the top grade pipes are still imported. The finishing stage is where we have problem as we still have to import titles and sanitary fittings, lightings, etc. But then, the bigger problem is not even the supply side but the demand side, as the economy is contracting peoples’ ability to afford homes. Because we have had economic downturns in the past, people start right sizing their pocket; they start scaling and prioritising what they hope to do. For us, part of what is likely to happen to our model is that we will have more people key into our ‘OPIC Advantage’ scheme.

    Ogun State housing projects seem to be mainly concentrated along the boundry of Lagos. This probably presupposes that you are trying to eat into the Lagos market. What are your housing projects for the interiors?

    By factor of providence, Ogun State surrounds Lagos, there is no way you can enter or exit Lagos State, even by water, without passing through Ogun State. Only a foolish man wants to go on walking when he is given an option to fly. A reasonable man will say let me take the one that will be less stressful, so for us here, the least stressful impact is to take care of the significant over flow of Lagos. So we started working on ourselves and that is why we find that most of our border towns now compete favourably with their neighbouring towns in Lagos. I live in Lekki, but I tell people that it is easier for me to live in Abeokuta than to live in Lekki, the only thing I go to do in Lekki is shopping, but very soon we will have our own mall here so I will not have to go to Lekki for shopping. To get from my house in Lekki to toll gate or phase 1 takes about two hours, whereas to get from my house in Ibara, Abeokuta to Ikeja, Lagos, takes an hour and 50 minutes. Is this not better than facing a constant two hour nightmare to get from Chevron roundabout to Lekki Phase 1. People were going through it because that is where the infrastructure was, that is where services are, but now we are providing the same thing and better grade of services here (Abeokuta). So why would you have to go through that stress when you can live here more peacefully? So its like starting from a point of least resistance by dealing with that sector first, generate revenue from there and then go to the inner cities and start turning them into upscale communities too. Incidentally, OPIC is in Agbara, Isheri, and Abeokuta. The Ministry of Housing is doing interventions in Ijebu-Ode; Housing Corporation is doing interventions in Ota. So when you look at the government interventions in housing holistically, you will see that we have covered the entire spread of the state.

    With the crash in crude oil price, the real estate sector is believed to be the next phase to drive the nation’s economy. Do you agree with this and why?

    When you are checking the health of an economy, you check the consumer index and also the housing sector index. It is only in Nigeria that we check crude oil price. This is an aberration because no country survives by depending on a single commodity. I see the downturn as an opportunity, because it makes everybody that is focusing on the top of the pyramid are now forced to come down. I believe that we are going through a tightening period but it is an opportunity and a window for growth of the sector. If you begin to create policies that supports the sectors that are productive in the society, then things will begin to get better. It will interest you to note that 21 per cent of America’s GDP is from the construction industry and the major index is how much they sell houses in a month. It is a chain economy- the importation guys working; the transportation guys working; the labour, and everybody is working and generating money and they are spending. So it is a wing that could turn this economy.

  • Firm offers ‘classy’ bungalows for sale at Casavilla Estate

    Firm offers ‘classy’ bungalows for sale at Casavilla Estate

    A real estate and property website, http:// vinerealtors.com, is offering for sale, three- bedroom semi-detached bungalows at Casavilla Estate, Magboro, Ogun State.

    Each of the structures cost N6.5m with a payment plan that spans over four years while you live in.

    Casavilla Estate is a serviced and carefully planned green estate located in Magboro just before the Mountain of Fire Ministry (MFM) prayer ground. It has dedicated 27 plots for green areas with parks and play areas, lawn tennis court and a basketball court.

    For prospective buyers coming Lagos or other parts of the country, Magboro is just 15 minutes drive from the Central Business District (CBD) in Alausa ikeja, Lagos and five-minute drive from Akute town via the proposed Akute– Magboro Road in Ogun State.

    The estate was conceived with comfort, class and ambiance in mind and has connecting walkways and road.

    Its features include – ample green area with parks and recreation centers, good road network, secure and gated environment and street lights.

    For detailed information- visit our website – http://vinerealtors.com

    Or contact us on – 08052864662, 08166250519 and/or via email – info@vinerealtors.com.

  • Invest in real estate, Nigerians in diaspora urged

    The Managing Director of Livelihood Homes Limited, a Lagos-based real estate firm, Mr .

    Kelly Nwogu, has advised Nigerians living abroad to invest in landed property.

    He said Nigerians in the diaspora should channel part of their resources to owning or building a personal house in their country for a better future when they return home.

    He identified lack of trust and challenges of processing necessary documents as the major problem that scares Nigerians in foreign countries from purchasing landed property in Nigeria.

    “So many people have been duped by their friends, relatives and quacks in the process of trying to help them purchase properties. A number of others have also been frustrated by cumbersome processing of necessary title documents on landed property while on short visit to the country, hence, not a few of them want to buy properties anymore in Nigeria,” Nwogu said, advising Nigerians in diaspora to patronise registered real estate firms when buying landed property in the country.

    He explained that there are plans by his company to engage Nigerians living in South Africa on how best to own property in Nigeria without stress, especially through its various housing projects.

  • NGO educates pupils on clean environment

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Friends of the Environment, has engaged secondary school pupils in Mushin, Lagos State, at a one-day seminar on the benefits of clean environment.

    The event with the theme: “Operation catch them young,” held at the Community Senior School, Mushin, was aimed at making the pupils to understand the importance of preserving their environment and the detriment of harming it.

    The Chairman on the occasion, Dr Samuel Akintayo, an insurance practitioner, said the event’s objective was to educate the pupils on their future.

    Akintayo said: “The youth are very important, so is our environment. Therefore, we are to keep our environment very clean to make Nigeria what it is supposed to be. Besides, to become something great in life, our environment matters. When these students become leaders of tomorrow, we will be certain of a clean environment, both in the financial, educational and economical sectors, among others. If all these institutions are clean, then we are assured of a clean nation. If we travel to other countries, it won’t be a new thing because we have a clean nation.”

    The Vice Principal of the school, Mrs. Ololade Taiwo, cautioned against acts that are capable of polluting the environment. She noted that the effects of noise and abandoned vehicles harm the social environment where plants, animals and humans live.

    Founder and co-ordinator of the NGO, Mrs. Iyabo Akinsiju said the organisation is aimed at upgrading the community and initiating a change of heart among the citizens.

    She said with their little efforts, children can change things for the better. “The environment is the only thing the rich and the poor share which cannot be dictated by the government; therefore, such a place needs to be given fair treatment. We believe if we get to the younger ones, we have reached the older ones. My advice to the young ones is to imbibe the habit of keeping a clean environment and try not to live in a polluted one,” she said.

    Happiness Nwankwo, an SSS 2 pupil at the seminar, said the eevnt has taught her the need for cleanliness and engaging in consistent environmental cleaning, both at home and school.

    Similarly, an SSS3 pupil of Itire Community Senior Secondary School, Itire, Blessing Okafor, said she has learnt the importance of maintaining a clean environment as well as the consequences of having a bad one.

    The pupils were also taught songs about the environment and were asked to teach their friends and colleagues, while the SS1 and SS2 class prefects were made ambassadors of the environment.

  • Developer reaffirms commitment to WTC Abuja

    Developer reaffirms commitment to WTC Abuja

    In spite of the prevailing economic downturn in the country and the currency depreciation, real estate enthusiasts are optimistic that the Phase One of the World Trade Centre project, Abuja will be delivered this year as projected by the developers.

    The Group Managing Director of Churchgate Group, Mr. Vinay Mahtani, at a meeting with estate valuers and agents in Abuja, said customer interest in the project has been overwhelming. He restated his firm’s commitment to delivering the Phase One of the project this year.

    Mahtani said there has been a growing demand for quality real estate — residential and commercial.

    “Many people share our dream of building world-class projects in Nigeria; and Nigerians, both at home and in the Diaspora, have shown their confidence in us through investments made already,”he said.

    At the meeting, an estate surveyor, Mr. Olusola Akinsola, who spoke on behalf of other estate surveyors and valuers, expressed satisfaction at the level of work on the Phase One. He xexplained that the effect of completing the WTC Abuja would be good for the real estate sector and the country’s economy at large. According to him, “housing is no more about shelter – it’s about employment, economic inclusiveness and multiplier effect on the local economy.” He opined that the WTC Abuja, being the first of its kind in West Africa, will bring all of these to the Nigerian economy.

    Construction of the WTC Abuja Phase One is now at the final stage. The project consists a residential tower that will offer luxury apartments with modern amenities and an AAA commercial tower that will accommodate businesses of all sizes. The buildings, at 24-storeys each, are set to define Abuja’s skyline: the commercial tower is the tallest office building in the nation’s capital, while the residential tower is the tallest residential building in Nigeria.

    On the potential of the WTC Abuja when completed, Assistant General Manager, Corporate Communication, Churchgate Group, Mr. Femi Awopetu said the WTC Abuja would be an economy driver in itself, bringing together corporations and individuals, and providing a platform on which they can conduct business.

    Awopetu added that the project will also impact the economy and improve welfare of lives. “We have already created employment for thousands of people during the construction of Phase One and this will continue throughout subsequent phases of the project,” he said.

  • Experts canvass accurate housing data

    Given the need to diversify the economy, experts have urged the government and  the citizenry to take advantage of opportunities in the real estate market.

    Last week at the Didi Museum, Victoria Island, Lagos, stakeholders  stressed the need to create a localised supply chain and accessible data to bridge housing deficits.

    President of the Roland Igninoba Real Foundation for Housing and Development, Mr Roland Igbinoba said his organisation was making effort to provide accurate analysis of the Nigerian real estate market to attract foreign and local investors, among other benefits.

    He said: “We thought about how we could provide data to the market, so we dimensioned the market, using Lagos as our case study. Our research covers mass housing, low income housing, medium, luxury and residential housing. Lagos was divided into clusters and analysed in terms of real estate, including their economic power. We broke the analysis down for easy read and with many pictures to break the barrier of too much text.”

    Igninoba said the report, the second edition since the first in 2009, provides easy access to all facts, data, statistics and analysis on the key players in the real estate market, as well as closing the gap between investors and housing deficits. He noted that Lagos, with growing housing deficit of about 2.4 million, needs to provide housing in areas where it is needed like on the Mainland.

    Chairman of the foundation, Mr. Newton Jibunnoh, said the report would help Nigeria ascertain her housing progress and predict same as far as 30 years from now. This, he said, is important to combat housing deficits in states with immigration explosion like Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja, which would benefit the economy at large.

    Said he: “The report is not just good for developers, but the entire housing market, including the academia. It is good for lecturers to teach and students to study, because everything is referenced. The country is hungry for investors but lacks data. Data gathering is a step in the right direction. Real estate sector is very vibrant in Nigeria, but when investors can’t acquire information, they go to their country’s embassies in Nigeria to ask for the information. It’s time for us to do this ourselves.”

    Chairman, Eko Atlantic, Mr. Ronald Chagaoury expressed the minds of foreign investors concerning Nigeria’s housing market.

  • Surveyors seek approval of land reforms committee’s proposals

    Surveyors seek approval of land reforms committee’s proposals

    The Federal Government has been asked to  approve the Presidential Technical Committee on Land Reforms and  Council of State proposals on land administration to bridge the housing gap.

    The Nigerian Institution of Estate Surveyors and Values (NIESV) said this was imperative to tackle the housing challenge.

    The institution said it would make a presentation on land administration and related matters to the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola.

    NIESV President Dr. Bolarinde Patunola-Ajayi, at a briefing, said the government had not addressed a major constraint – land administration despite the acute housing problem.

    According to the institution, reviewing and enacting title registration laws are long overdue if any meaningful feat is to be achieved in bridging the over 17 million housing deficit in the country.

    NIESV, it was gathered, in a proposal to Fashola, noted that the Land Use Act poses challenges to land administration and housing. The body of surveyors, therefore, appealed to the Minister to approve the regulation proposed by the Presidential Technical Committee on Land reforms and the National Council of State, which will make it easier for the titling and registering of land both in the urban and rural areas.

    Similarly, Patunola-Ajayi said NIESV finds it rather regrettable the inaccurate inventory of public or government fixed assets across the country. This situation, he said, has made it impossible, to find a complete record of all Federal Government fixed assets in one location, especially in the lands department, which, ideally should be government’s repository of lands and other housing related records.

    “Apart from the loss or damage of records sites, government has not consciously invested in inventory of its fixed assets and creating a reliable database from it. Not only will such exercise be money well spent, but it will also minimise the loss of government property. It will make portfolio management easier and critical decisions on rationalisation of non-core assets can be taken transparently,” Patunola-Ajayi said.

  • ‘Home ownership a personal responsibility’

    ‘Home ownership a personal responsibility’

    Against  the backdrop of the shortfall in housing, the executive directors of Pertinence Limited, an investment firm, Wisdom Ezekiel and Sunday Olorunseyi, have said owning a house has to be a personal responsibility. One should not wait for the government to solve the problem, they said.

    The duo, who spoke on the sideline of the firm’s land seminar and promo in Lagos, at the weekend, said it would take an eternity for the government to provide the requisite housing units given its huge responsibilities and cash constraints.

    This, they said, informed the intervention of their firm, through its subsidiary, ABC Gardens, to proffer solutions to Nigerians desirous of owning their own homes.

    Ezekiel said the firm was doing this through buying large expanses of land at places people  think cannot be developed.   The parcels of land are divided into plots which are developed, he stated.

    These, he noted, are sold at reduced prices. “Somebody has to decide that he wants to solve his own housing problem by saving money monthly or contacting us to work out a flexible payment option,” he said.

    Olorunseyi said the firm assists Nigerians by reducing the cost associated with house ownership. Some of this costs, he said, are things that the firm has looked for a way to average it. For instance, to process the documentation of a land individually will cost a lot; but the firm does it in bulk for its customers to reduce cost.

    And as a means of rewarding and encouraging Nigerians to build houses, the firm gave out plots of land to some of its customers. The lands are located in Sango, and Ifo, in Ogun State. While some of the customers got the plot of land for free, others were given discount; and an all-expense paid trip to Dubai was won by a customer.

    “The empowerment of people is our focus. We want to provide solution to housing deficit challenges, having known that the land mass is not increasing but population of people is increasing,” Olorunseyi said.

    Beneficiaries of the land commended the organisers of the promo, saying it would boost Nigerians interest in building houses.

     

  • Wooden bridges to go in Lagos, says govt

    Wooden bridges to go in Lagos, says govt

    All wooden bridges in riverine areas in Lagos State will soon go, Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure Mr Ganiyu Johnson has said.

    They are to be gradually replaced under a policy adopted by the government, Johnson said at a briefing to commemorate the first anniversary of the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode administration.

    Such areas include parts of Ojo Local Government; Oko-Oloyun in Alimosho and Okota in Oshodi-Isolo Local Government.

    Johnson said the exercise was decided upon following Ambode’s state-wide tour to assess the level of infrastructure and possible rehabilitation.

    Other projects conceived after the tour include the construction of the Ajah flyover and upgrading of the Freedom Road to Admiralty Road in Eti-Osa Local Government Area (LGA); construction of Abule-Egba flyover in Ifako-Ijaye LGA; and rehabilitation and upgrading of strategic arterial and inner roads in Epe.

    Johnson further listed other projects to include the construction of a pedestrian bridge, layby and slip road at Ojodu-Berger Bus Stop on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway; construction of the second Ojota pedestrian bridge; reconstruction of Brown Road, Oshodi and rehabilitation and upgrading of Aiyetoro Road (Section 1) and Ishefun/Camp Davis/New Market road (Section 1), both in Alimosho LGA.

    Similarly, the state is at an advanced stage of signing a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with a consortium to develop the fourth Mainland Bridge. He explained that the proposed bridge will run from Ajah to Northwest direction towards the lagoon shoreline to Lagos-Ibadan Expressway via Ikorodu. The approximate length of the bridge is 37.9km with a design speed of 140km/h. On completion, the bridge would drastically reduce traffic volume on Eko, Cater and Third Mainland Bridges.

    Johnson captures the importance and value of the project thus: “This lies in its capacity to rapidly decongest the traffic gridlock within the Lekki corridor and redistribute traffic towards Lagos Mainland, which serves to meet increased future road infrastructure demands.”

  • Why Lekki/Ajah is property investors’ preferred destination

    Why Lekki/Ajah is property investors’ preferred destination

    Lekki and its corridors are goldmine for smart real estate and property investors willing to double their investment within a short time.

    Lekki, regarded as the new Dubai in Africa, is the most structure part of Lagos and holds huge potential for both cheap and expensive properties.

    Its closeness to the Atlantic Ocean has increased its commercial value significantly as this attracts smart international investors from different parts of the world.

    Why Lekki is now the investment destination of choice:

    It is situated by the sea coast of and has the most ventilated environment in Lagos.

    It boasts of resort centers like the Eko Tourist Resort and La Campagne Tropicana beach resort.

    Lekki has a Federal Highway that links Lagos to other parts of the country.

    Lekki is home to several top class estates and properties.

    It has proposed international airport and International FREE Trade Zone.

    Several international projects such as Dangote Refinery, oil tank farms and seaport are ongoing in the area.

    This is the time to take advantage of Lekki’s unique location and its alluring features.

    For more information contact:

    VINE REALTORS LIMITED – http://vinerealtors.com.

    Our services include – real estate sales, real estate brokerage and products sales and services.

    For real estate sales, we assist our clients in selling properties across residential and commercial categories. Our focus is on fast developing emerging locations within the Lagos metropolis; with a plan to diversify into other cities, states and countries.

    We have several properties available and these include – VIP Gardens, Blevic Gardens, Kingston Gardens, City Point Gardens and Crystal Garden, among others.

    We assure you of a great deal.

    Contact us:

    Email: info@vinerealtors.com

    Phone: 08052864662, 08166250519