Category: Building & Properties

  • ASO forum to tackle housing needs

    ASO forum to tackle housing needs

    PROBLEMS affecting Nigerians in the housing sector will become focal points at this year’s edition of the International ASO Housing Exhibition and Conference, slated to hold from Thursday to Saturday at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.

    During the first two days of the event, local and international experts in the sector are expected to extensively deliberate on four salient topics, namely, funding, housing delivery and infrastructure, mortgages and legislation.

    The confab, according to a statement, will be attended by stakeholders in the housing industry from the public and private sectors of the economy, including policy makers in private and public enterprises, Federal and state government representatives, real estate investors and professional mortgage providers.

    Entitled: Achieving affordable housing delivery by creating 500,000 housing units by 2016, the facilitators of the event, ASO Savings & Loans Plc., explained that the initiative has been conceived to create an effective template for addressing the chronic housing shortage as well as poor access to housing finance in the country. This, according to them, is aimed at creating a roadmap for private and public sector partnership for attaining the important Vision20: 2020 of the Federal Government, which is to provide affordable homes for Nigerians by 2020.

    “It is salutary that such collaborations and objectives are in line with and complementary to President Goodluck Jonathan’s government’s Transformation Agenda in infrastructural and housing development. This is more so because the government at several fora, has called for private sector participation in the attainment of its economic transformation goals, “ said the statement.

    Panelists including, Evans Kofi Essienyi of the Affordable Housing Institute, Ghana; Dr. Delphine Sangodeyi of AHI North and West Africa Associates, Paris; Stephen Terseer ABAR, first Vice President, Nigerian Bar Association; Kayode Omotosho, Executive Secretary, MBAN, Lagos and other distinguished speakers are expected to present papers at the event.

  • Lands Bureau to launch  operative network

    Lands Bureau to launch operative network

    The Ogun State Bureau of Lands and Survey will launch its continuity operative system (CORS) network soon.

    Measures to ensure the efficient administration, management and allocation of lands and related matters have been put in place.

    The Director-General of the Bureau, Mrs Ronke Shokefun, made this known to reporters during an interactive session in Abeokuta. She said four CORS stations would be launched before August to enable government to determine where to locate its infrastructure.

    She added that this would help address boundary disputes between Ogun and her neighbours, reduce loss of territory and generate more funds.

    She said the equipment had arrived at the port, adding that  this would allow surveyors, government agencies and the general public have access to data through radio satellite, GRPS and the internet.

    The Bureau, she said, has embarked on the computerisation of its registry documents in a digital archive as well as developing a modern Geographical Information System (GIS).

    The director-general said GIS would capture, store, analyse, share, manage and display all types of geographical data and automate the work flow processes within the Bureau.

    She said: “The goal of the GIS and Land Management System (LAMS) is to ensure that land administration in Ogun State meets the acceptable global standards and help government to enforce judicious use of its land as well ensure full compliance with its various land policies and building regulations.”

    Other benefits of the new measures, she said, include eradication of double allocation of land, easy processing of title documents and preventing loss of land to other states and the Benin Republic through clear and unambiguous demarcations.

    Shokefun stressed that accuracy of surveying measurements, faster searches for property titles, online search facilities and increased revenue are other advantages derivable from the innovations.

    She advised corporate organisation and individuals to always patronise the Bureau in order to get genuine allocation of land.

  • Will they get  their land back?

    Will they get their land back?

    In 2004, the Federal Government dispossessed the Abesan Town allotees of their land despite satisfying all requirements. In 2007, the government realised its mistake and promised to return the land to them. Six years after, the allottees are still waiting on the government, writes SEYI ODEWALE

    Pa Olusegun Akinola, a pensioner, is distressed. Instead of enjoying his 20-year-old retirement, he is faced with the battle of his life. Before retiring in 1993, Akinola keyed into a Federal Government housing scheme, which began in 1987. Thirteen years after he was allocated the land, the Federal Government took it from him.

    “Since then, I have been running from pillar to post because of this land, which was duly allocated to me after I had paid the necessary money and got all the papers that entitled me to the land. Thank God, I have another place to rest my head. You could imagine what would have happened to me,” he lamented.

    Tagged Aboru Federal Housing Scheme, which later became Abesan Town Project, Akinola put all he had into the project. It was then known as Site and Services Scheme. But his hopes were dashed. In 2004, bulldozers demolished everything he had on the land.

    Akinola is not alone, his compatriot and long time friend, Pa Olasunkanmi Adepoju, suffered a similar fate. His building was also demolished. So was that of Uche Obirai, whose in-laws are calling for his head because they think he ‘duped’ them; the money he spent on the land was said to be his in-laws. They have taken him to court.

    There are many others with the same sour tales. About 636 plots allocated to them were seized in 2004 by the then Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Mrs Mobolaji Osomo.

    According to Akinola, the government provided the land in the Site and Services Scheme, which was bought by the allottees to build specified structures on. Government was to provide road network, maintenance of the estate and other sundry things.

    “It was originally meant to be like others before it where the structures were built by the government and later sold to the beneficiaries. But paucity of funds, according to the government, brought about the site and services scheme where we bought the land from the government and built to its specification. The scheme is in three categories: low, medium and high density,” he said.

    But Mrs Osomo vide a ‘stop construction order,’ issued on her behalf to the allottees threw a spanner into the scheme. The order read in part: “The Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Mrs. A. M. Osomo is happy to inform you that the President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has graciously approved the construction of the Abesan New Town under the 1976 Land acquisition act No 13 Vol. 63 of March 11. The construction will commence on or before the end of August 2004 by the grace of God. The estimated completion time and sale of completed units is 18 months. For planning and documentation purposes, you are requested to submit the following documents to establish your stake and your enabling authority: Letter of allocation; certificate of occupancy(C of O); approved building plan and any other relevant documents.”

    A few months later, the allottees were declared illegal occupants through a letter dated December 9, 2004. Consequently, their structures were demolished and their ownership of the land put in abeyance. For almost 10 years their fate has continued to hang in the balance. Uncertainty became their lot. They became victims of what some of them termed ‘executive lawlessness’; lands duly allocated to them were taken away from them in one fell swoop with an executive fiat.

    A few among them had died, while others are still hopeful that their case is not lost. What seemed a ray of light appeared at the end of the tunnel for them on October 17, 2007, when a letter signed by a Deputy Director (Land Administration), G.T.N. Tabansi, addressed to the chairman of the allottees, informed them that the government has “approved that the affected people (as contained in our records) should repossess their plots”.

    The letter went further: “In order to enhance smooth possession, the Cadastral Survey Unit has been directed to assist in relocating or re-establishing the beacons after sighting the original documents earlier given to you. I am therefore directed to request from you a comprehensive list of the affected people with the addresses of such properties.” However, since then nothing has been forthcoming on the part of the ministry.

    Recounting their woes, Pa Akinola, who is the Vice Chairman of the allottees, said their plights were compounded with the encroachment of the land by the Omo Onile, who sold every piece of the land shortly after the demolition exercise of 2004 was carried out.

    “As you know, nature abhors vacuum, the Omo Onile of the area encroached massively into the land and sold everything. Prior to this, there was a civil suit challenging the Federal Government at the Federal High Court, Lagos, filled by the Omo Onile over the ownership of the land. The Omo Onile won the case.This emboldened them to take possession of the land and sell it. But the government later challenged it at the Court of Appeal and the appellate court set aside the ruling of the lower court and said the land belonged to the government, having acquired it and paid full compensation to the Omo Onile,” Pa Akinola said.

    In a letter by the allottees’ solicitors, Kunle Fadipe& Co. to the Minister of Works, Housing and Development, Ms Ammal Pepple, dated March 3, this year, the minister was reminded of the pending promise to reinstate the allottees to their land. Fadipe quoted the October 17, 2007 letter signed on behalf of the minister by one Tabansi, a deputy director in the ministry, assuring the allottees of the ministry’s resolve to reinstate them back to their land. He said the obvious reason for the long delay was the pending law suit at the Court of Appeal, which was recently decided in favour of the Federal Government in a Suit No. CA/L/563/08. “The pendency of the suit in court probably made it impossible for the Federal Government to restore our clients back to the land. Now that the major obstacle has been removed, it is our clients’ prayer that you would kindly see the need to do the needful at this time,” Fadipe wrote.

    However, attempts to reinstate them, unfortunately, did not go far. The reason for this has remained unclear. In February 2008, one Olakunde A. D. on behalf of the Federal Controller, Urban and Regional Development Department of the ministry, Abesan Zonal Office, wrote a letter inviting them to a meeting to discuss strategies and logistics, but it yielded no meaningful results. “This is why we are appealing to the ministry to do the needful and restore our land to us,” Akinola said.

    Abesan Zonal Office Director, Mr Tayo Adeoya, in a telephone chat with The Nation declined to comment on the matter. He said he was barred as a civil servant to talk to press. “I cannot talk to you on that matter. Please see the controller who will give you an update on that matter. You know I am a civil servant,” he said.

    Earlier attempts to see the Controller at the ministry’s Moloney annex office, Onikan, Lagos were unsuccessful as his aides said he was not available. Even when The Nation reporter went with the allottees who requested to meet him last month, he was said to be unavailable.

    Investigations, however, showed that the ministry was willing to get the issue done with, but what is delaying the process is the political will to do it. “The issue has been the albatross of the government and it will want to save its face by reinstating the allottees to their land. What may, however, delay this process is the illegal occupation of the land by those who bought the land from the Omo Onile,” said a source who does not want his name in print.

    The source also said: “This should not be a problem for the government to tackle. What should be done is that since an appeal court judgment has declared government as the bona fide owner of the land, what is left for the government is to take possession and reinstate the original allottees.”

    An unconfirmed source also revealed that the land appeared to be enmeshed in a web of litigation as one of those that bought the property from the Omo Onile has been dragged to court by them (Omo Onile) for failing to pay their balance.

    Whatever might have been the case, the allottees believe that the wrong done them can still be redress. “Some of us have died, some are dying, some do not have the means to embark on such projects again and we are not growing younger. At least, I can count on my finger tips about four of our members who have died. They died frustrated by an anti-people decision and the only thing to make them happy in their grave and those of us alive is to restore the land to us. Our hope lies in a meeting we have scheduled with the Minister and the Director of Land Administration on the 25th of this month in Abuja. We hope the meeting will yield positive results and put our minds at rest,” Akinola said, showing copies of the letters sent to the two principal officers of the ministry.

     

  • Not yet Uhuru for construction

    Not yet Uhuru for construction

    The construction sector is yet to realise its potential, despite Nigeria’s huge infrastructure deficit. Over the last three decades, according to a research by Vetiva, crop production, crude oil production, wholesale and retail have recorded a 27-year Compounded Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 28 per cent, 29 per cent and 26 per cent, while the sector’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew at CAGR of 21 per cent during the same period. It is, therefore, evident that Nigeria is far behind in the construction sector. Below are the developments that have taken place in the past three months, writes OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE.

    The Federal Government has made good its promise of building a second Niger Bridge linking Asaba, Delta State capital, with the Southeast and Southsouth. It has mobilised the contractor with N100 million, which according to the Minister of Works, Mr Mike Onolememen, is for ‘procurement’.

    The ministry has also reconstructed the ‘Bridge Head’ in Onitsha, the Anambra State commercial hub. But, the drains, unfortunately, are filled with sand and refuse which, if not cleared before the rains start, will exacerbate flooding in the state, according to scientific predictions.

    Last week,  road contracts worth N47.8 billion were awarded by the Federal Government for 13 roads across the country.

    The minister said though the contracts were awarded at the end of last year, the contractors were only mobilised to site last January. Some of the roads are in Cross River, Benue, Imo, Abia and Ebonyi states. The Port Harcourt/Enugu Road has become an albatross for the government as the patch-up work executed  by the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA) at some portions have not offered succour to those who ply the highway. Users of the road are clamouring for its total overhaul and reconstruction.

    After the cancellation of the concession agreement on Lagos/Ibadan Expressway last year, observers had expected that the contract would have been awarded to a competent contractor. But, to their dismay, nothing has been done to allay the fears of the public on the fate of road users in the first quarter.

    The East/West Road in the Niger Delta is also not free from controversy.Allegations of insufficient funding and sacking of incompetent contractors delayed its unveiling in the first quarter. It is hoped that those in charge would do the needful and deliver the project on schedule.

    The restiveness in the northern part of the country has equally delayed projects or made  contractors to abandon them as they are abducted and killed indiscriminately by the ‘terrorist’gangs.

    Observers said except the activities of terrorists are curtailed, roads in the zone may be worse for it.

    The rumoured near collapse of the third Mainland Bridge was also dispelled as the Federal Government dispatched bridge experts to investigate the alleged tremor on the bridge, which was given a clean bill of health.

     

    Housing

    Nigeria with a population of over 160 million, advertising the construction of  8,069 houses  with 58,632 persons as beneficiaries and the supposed 1,703 projects on ongoing, is not only ridiculous but alsoa far cry from national demand. One of the key achievements of the ministry recently, is the review and approval of new housing policy and the drive to deliver housing through public-private partnership (PPP).

    On the heels of this, the ministry of Land, Housing and Urban Development is partnering with the private sector to seek alternative housing models, such as dry housing construction models and form technology, which has the capacity to produce high number of units in the shortest possible time. The minister said her ministry is working tirelessly to create an enabling environment for developers to operate by asking state government to built infrastructure that will aid the private sector to operate.

    To underscore the seriousness of the government, the Land, Housing and Urban Development Minister, Ama Pepple, in Abuja vowed not to inaugurate any estate project with less than 500 housing units. She said it was necessary if meaningful contributions towards reducing the nation’s huge housing deficit are to be achieved.

    Similarly, Pepple restated her commitment to the provision of low-cost housing for the teeming populace. To accomplish this, she said she had started discussions with state governments to make land available for the construction of low-cost housing units across the states of the federation.

    “The challenge of providing affordable houses to our teeming population has continued to engage the attention of this administration. We have re-energised and re-focused, but we do have challenges relating to cost of land, cost of building materials and the cost of interest on mortgages that make it difficult for houses to be cheaper than what they are today,” she said.

    But stakeholders are of the opinion that with all the challenges enumerated by the minister in the housing sector it may yet be a while before appreciable success can be recorded in the sector.

    However, a fortnight ago, the Federal Government approved N1 billion for the upgrading of slums in Kano, Lagos, Rivers, Kogi and Abia states to improve the quality of housing and living standards of  the majority of the people in the country.

    She revealed that the ministry is running a housing census with a firm with a view to having an accurate data on the nation’s housing deficit and regretted that the government does not have a reliable data to ascertain the actual gap in the housing stock of the nation.

     

    Environment

    Nigerians are still waiting for carefully thought out national environment policies especially action plan on climate change. Officials from the ministry have attended international conferences on environment and the public are waiting anxiously to see the implementation of negotiations from such world foras.

    Some schools of thought believe the Federal Ministry of Environment may just exist in name with nothing to show for it. Their impacts were only felt in press clips during the massive flooding of some states. Conversely, Lagos State has held international conferences on climate change where experts presented papers with the fifth in the series held last month.

    The state went to the extent of forming climate change clubs in secondary schools and spreading its good news of climate change mitigating tactics amongst all strata of the citizenry. It also formed advocacy groups to reach target audience, such as traders, artisans and others which is not the same at the federal level.

     

    Water/sanitation

    The government has done very little in this sector as the majority of the urban dwellers depend on boreholes as a major source of water supply while the rural dwellers depend largely on streams and non-safe water sources for their domestic use.

    This lack-lustre attitude of the Federal Government was evident when the Minister of Water Resources, Mrs. Sarah Ochekpe, at an event in Plateau State assured participants that the challenges facing the water sector in the country would be over by 2025 without giving the basis for such assumption.

    The inadequacy or lack of safe water and improved sanitation services in the country is manifested in the prevalence of water and sanitation related disease such as diarrhea, which results from poor sanitary/hygiene habits and consumption of water of poor quality.

    It is the second major cause of infant mortality after malaria and the third major cause of under-five mortality.

    The prevalence of diarrhea is higher in the rural setting than urban areas and in the northern zones than the south. Reports say an estimated 150,000 to 200,000 diarrhea-related deaths occur among children below five each year.

    One major problem in this sector is the wide disparity between the demand for water and sanitation.

    Knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) studies reveal a wide disparity in the priority ranking of water supply and sanitation by communities where water is considered the topmost priority of most communities and pit latrines (as an indicator for sanitation demand) is viewed as the least problem.

  • Kogi flood victims decry N3,000 palliative

    Landlords affected by last year’s flood in Kogi State, from Ajaokuta Local Government, have described the N3,000 palliative given to them by the state government as an insult and a lack of concern for the plight of its citizenry.

    In a protest letter, signed by the leaders of the group, Pastor Zacchaeus Momorebe, Suleiman Agidi and James Oguche, a copy of which was made available to reporters at the weekend, they condemned the paltry sum.

    The statement noted that despite the over N1 billion donation, the state government claimed to have received from the Federal Government and other individuals, it couldn’t take care of the victims.

    The victims, who staged a protest to NUJ Press Centre, said: “We were subjected to rigorous exercises of registration in the camps, documentation with the Ministry of Lands to confirm the approval status of each building with town planning, yet nothing happened. We have lost all we have laboured to build. Our houses were submerged and household items destroyed. We are now destitute in our land and all the government could do for us is N3000. Is it how the government should treat it citizens?” they lamented.

    The victims lamented that, despite the huge sums of money received by the state government in trust for the victims, only such a meagre sum was considered enough compensation, saying the group was compelled “to ask the Governor, Captain Idris Wada, the rationale behind the disbursement.”

    They said President Goodluck Jonathan on his visit to the state during the flood promised to ensure that the victims were rehabilitated to start a new life, wondering why the state government gave them stipends.

    They alleged that their members at Gadumo community and Old Polytechnic quarters were paid theirs on March 28, stressing that the amount was unacceptable and laughable. The group urged the government to investigate the disbursement, saying it was heartless for the state government, which asked them to relocate to other locations, to give them N3,000.

    Reacting to the development, the Commissioner for the Environment, Abdulrahman Wuya, said the money was not compensation, but an assistance to the victims.

    According to him, the state government has other post flood plans for the people and asked them to be patient with the government, saying the money was small because of the number of people affected.

    All attempts to reach the Director of Ajaokuta Local Government Area, John Echejo, who supervised the disbursement for the council, proved abortive as he neither picked his calls nor replied a text message sent to him.

    But a member of the committee, who spoke on anonymity, claimed that they received N7 million to be distributed to the over 20 communities in Ajaokuta affected by the flood

    It would be recalled that the state government last month said that it released N15 million to Ajaokuta Council for disbursement to flood victims.

  • Edo spends N160b on roads, drainage upgrade

    Edo spends N160b on roads, drainage upgrade

    The Edo State Government has spent N160 billion  to build new roads, rehabilitate old ones and upgrade its drainage.

    Governor Adams Oshiomhole said he embarked on massive infrastructure development due to his belief that it is key to economic growth.

    He spoke at an event organised by the  Nigeria Institution of Estate Surveyors &Valuers (NIESV) in Benin.

    He also said his administration intended to invest in hydrocarbon for gas to power and fertiliser manufacturing in the state.

    On housing, the governor,  who was represented by his Deputy Chief of Staff, Mr Stephen Ideheren, said the state has earmarked 1,500 hectares of land for massive housing production to make housing affordable to the low and medium income groups in the state.

    Oshiomhole also said his administration was set create a new Government Reserved Area  (GRA) with world-class facilities to bridge the gap in upscale housing. According to him, Geographic Information System (GIS) has been introduced for the public to access land information without hitches.

    This is in addition to rolling out a development plan for the state until 2020. The governor said his priority this year was to complete all projects, build low to middle income skill acquisition centres and also build capacity in the public service.

    Speaking on the sideline at the event, the Secretary to the Federal Government (SGF), Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, harped on the importance of infrastructure development. He said no nation could develop without competitive infrastructure.

    He said the provision of infrastructure would not be complete if the human capacity was not developed to be at par with it.

    Anyim, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Political Affairs in his office, urged estate surveyors and valuers to imbibe ethics and morals in the discharge of their duties. He  also harped on the need for collaboration with the government  in her quest to bring down the prices of houses to make it affordable to the majority of the people.

  • NBC, others partner on World Water Day

    Nigerian Bottling Company’s (NBC’s) has committed its self to the provision of safe and drinkable water in their environment and beyond.

    Celebrating this year’s World Water Day with her partners, Federal Ministry of Water Resources and Ministry of Environment, the company Plant Manager, Ikeja Dayo Omotosho, said the company’s interest in water sustainable schemes extends to the communities where it operates.

    He said in continuation of their social responsibility, they have in the spirit if the theme of this year’s celebration, ‘International year of water cooperation’, donated water storage materials to Agidingbi Senior Secondary School, Ikeja, Lagos to demonstrate to it a unique method of purifying water.

    Speaking at the handing over of the equipment to the school, he said: “Given the nature of our business as a bottler of beverages of The Coca-Cola Company, NBC appreciates the importance of water. We appreciate the fact that our ability to grow is related to the availability and quality of local water resources. Therefore, we consciously invest in programmes that contribute to water access and promote water security and by so doing, contribute to the long-term socio-economic development of communities.

    Furthermore, he stressed that access to safe water contributes to healthy communities, which in turn, releases the potential of the people in these communities to thrive in their various enterprises. ‘’Access to water, therefore, is a major contributor to vibrant and productive local economies,” he said.

    Vice Principal of Agidingbi Senior Secondary School, Mrs. Gladys Nsaka, praised NBC’s initiatives on WWD adding that it would help the school make better use of water and enhance the students’knowledge about water optimisation.

    NBC’s Communication Manager, Water Strategy, Ms Yomi Onakoya, said their strategy is encapsulated in the 3Rs of Reduce, Replenish and Recycle. She pledged their continued support for such initiative in future to improve water quality.

  • Lagos spends N1.5b on roads

    Lagos spends N1.5b on roads

    The Lagos Metropolitan Development and Governance Project (LMDGP) has built infrastructure projects worth N1,461,699,541.53 in some communities in Agege  to lift the slum locations.

    The completed projects are 16 standard roads  that covers Abimbola Street, Adenle, Ayeni, Church, Olusanya, Oremeji, Owo and Salawu Streets. Other projects are in  Salimotu, Soretire, Oyewole, Oguntade, Arigbanla and Ajiboye streest. They were executed by an indigenous contractor, Laralek Ultimate Limited.

    Last week, the residents recounted their experiences before and after the completion of the various projects  commissioned in their areas to The Nation.

    Expressing their gratitude, the Chairman, Community Development Committee (CDC) in Agege Local Government Area, Comrade Toyin Balogun, singled out the construction of Olusanya Street as “one of the best things that have ever happened to the community”.

    Stressing the importance of the road, Balogun hinted that one of the major problems confronting the community yearly is flood. “But with the completion of Olusanya Street, including the drainage facilities, Agege is no longer afraid of rain”.

    The CDC chair also extolled the management of LMDGP for the proposed construction of block of schools in the area.

    Chairman, Agege Local Government, Hon Abdul Kareem Jubril hailed the intervention by LMDGP, noting that it has not only provided the needed infrastructure in the local government, but also checked vandalism  and other vices the area was synonymous with before.

    He said many young people are now gainfully engaged either as environment vanguards or in other useful ventures due to the presence of the needed infrastructure.

    Expressing similar view, Bishop Julius Olusanya, while commending the efforts of the agency in the provision of the amenities, said the health care centres, road projects and the proposed block of classrooms would obliterate the toga of the blighted area that Agege has been wearing for a long time.

    At Orile Agege, CDC Chairman, Mr Funsho Akindehin, urged the LMDGP to hasten the completion of the classrooms to be constructed in Oyewole area and Methodist School.

    “While we are expressing the gratitude of the community member to the LMDGP and the Governor of Lagos State, we want to specifically ask for the construction of Ogundele and Olowookere streets.

    “What Olusanya Street is to the people of Agege Local Government is what Ogundele and Olowookere streets are to us in Orile Agege. Therefore, we urged the LMDGP to include it in their projects, reconstruction of these roads.

    The Vice Chairman of Orile Agege Local Council Development Area (LCDA) Julius Olusanya pledged that his council will complement the efforts of government by insisting that vehicles are not abandoned on the roads, discourage street trading and indiscriminate dumping of refuse.

  • Don to govt: subsidise wastes collection

    Government at all levels should subsidise wastes collection in Nigeria, a professor of industrial chemistry at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), David S. Ogunniyi, has said.

    He recommended the persuasion of consumers and manufacturers to promote recycled products.

    Prof. Ogunniyi made the recommendation while presenting the 125th UNILORIN Inaugural Lecture. The speech was entitled: My adventure with polymers.

    He also suggested a waste management policy that would involve avoidance of waste and their chemical re-usage.

    He said: “Generally, the public must be educated to dispose litter (especially polymer litters) in a safe and responsible manner.”

    The professor of Industrial Chemistry listed some of the challenges to include high cost of collection; contamination of collected polythene sheets by water, oil or sand and; inferiority of recycled products.

    His words: “The use of biodegradable plastics is being canvassed, but it is not yet a commercial success and the introduction of biodegradable packaging is still considered expensive. If degradable plastics are buried, their degradation may still be a problem because of inadequate air.

    “Also, if biodegradable plastics disintegrate, the resulting particles and dust may further threaten the environment. The disposal of plastics as a refuse or litter is a volume problem rather than weight problem. Also, the relative proportion of plastics in refuse increases on account of their slow degradability.

    “Polymers have the tendency to cause litter since most grades are not biodegradable and they are invariably found in every municipal waste. Furthermore, it takes long period of time for polymers to degrade and even the products of their degradation will still cause litter.”

  • A pearl of a home

    A pearl of a home

    In 18 months, the first tenants of the multi-billion dollar Eko Atlantic City on Victoria Island, Lagos, which sits on reclaimed land, will take possession of their flats in the 24- storey Eko Pearl. Others are billed to occupy theirs in 20 months, writes OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE.

    EKO Pearl, a 24-storey luxury tower, in Eko Atlantic City, will welcome its first tenants in 18 months. The city is built on land reclaimed from the Atlantic Ocean.

    It consists of 24 residential floors, a pool, terrace level floor, a technical floor, ground floor and a basement floor dedicated to 345 parking places and 48 storage rooms. The tower sits on a self-contained area with secure parking about 500 metres away from the financial centre of Lagos.

    According to the Managing Director of South EnergyX Nig Limited, the developers of the city, Mr David Frame, residents of the tower will enjoy uninterrupted view of the sea and enjoy its cool breeze. Besides, they will enjoy first-class infrastructure and facilities, including uninterrupted supply of power and water, and security services.

    The construction is private sector driven and it will be built to international standards, by Eko Pearl Nig. Limited.

    Frame said facilities in Eko Pearl, in addition to what Eko Atlantic City, will offer, include a swimming pool and tennis courts.

    He said: “The location is close enough to remove entirely the stress of long drives to work, but far enough to enjoy the splendor of quiet living. It is carefully designed as a place to live, recreate and work. It is a self- contained city where the best of schools, hospital, recreation centres and indeed world class business centres can be found.”

    Explaining the house types in Eko Pearl, a project manager said they are built in three styles, apartments, duplexes and penthouses. He said the apartments are on the first to the 18th floor and each will consist of an entrance hall, a sitting room, dining room, family living room, kitchen and four master bedrooms.

    It will also have one guest bathroom, one maid room and WC, laundry, three balconies, four underground parking places and one storage room.

    Duplex floor

    Duplex apartments are on the 19th-22nd floor with four master bedrooms, two balconies, family living room, laundry among others.

    The promoters said the apartments would be built to the finest standards in architectural design, construction and convenience for a life worth living. The third house type is the penthouse, which is dubbed ‘apartments in the sky’. Each penthouse offers homeowners remarkable panoramic views where luxury and lifestyle intertwine.

    The edifice, he also said, will be built with two passenger elevators, service elevator, mechanical ventilation for all basement, sanitary fixtures, fire detector system, air conditioning system and beautiful landscaping. He said the building would be an epitome of good life and style.

    Eko Atlantic City, which also hosts Eko Energy City, exclusively for the oil and gas industries, is built on land reclaimed from the Atlantic Ocean.

    At the end of the land reclamation in 2017, Eko Atlantic City will sit on about 10,000-square metre of land lost to the ocean since 1905.

    Frame said the city is divided into six phases with 1,500 plots, which make up phases one and two almost sold out.

    A firm, Orlean Invest, has begun the development of the 25-storey Eko Energy City. The pilling works have been completed. About 70 per cent of the land has been sold with over 40 per cent of is believed to be owned by banks and other financial institutions.

    On the costs of the plots, he said land-locked plots cost $1,250 per square metre while the ocean front ones cost are sold for $2,500 per square metre.