Category: Building & Properties

  • Ogun reworks its land administration

    Ogun reworks its land administration

    The Ogun State Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Land Allocations, Acquisitions, Sales and Concession of Government Properties and Administration of Land Policies, Rules and Regulations was set up for a purpose—to correct the perceived wrongs done to certain people and communities whose land were forcefully acquired between January 2004 and May 29, last year, OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE reports

    The Ogun State Government has liberalised land acquisition and documentation. This is a fall-out of the judicial commission of enquiry set up on September 16, 2011 by  Governor Ibikunle Amosun.

    The committee had, as part of its mandate, to inquire into allocations of state land between January 2004 and May 29, 2011. It also had to identify whether such allocations involved breaches of policies, guidelines, rules, regulations or procedures resulting in non-payment or underpayment of appropriate fees.

    Others were: to establish loss of revenue to the state; multiple allocation of prime land to any person or group of persons; loss of opportunity to the state for industrial, commercial and agricultural development or any other situation, which in the opinion of the commission, was not in the public interest.

    Besides, it was also mandated to inquire into the structures, systems, methods, policies and procedures of land administration in Ogun State between January 2004 and May 29, 2011 to determine the adequacy, conformity with best practices and transparency of the systems, methods, policies and procedures as well as identifying instances of impropriety in land allocation and acquisition.

    Before then, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) had tagged the Ogun 36th among states on the ease of doing business, especially on land acquisition and documentation.

    But  the Special Adviser/Director General, Bureau of Lands and Survey, Mrs Ronke Sokefun, said  the challenge before was not that the bureau didn’t have the required manpower but what they lacked was cohesion between the various agencies, which created the time lag in land document processing.

    She said the government hired a consultant to handle the review and re-engineering to automate the processing of Certificate of Occupancy (C of O), review how various departments interact. She said the bureau has succeeded in generating a work flow of how the papers would move from desk to desk until they get the final signature. This, she said, had not only reduced time but also removed duplication, exploitation, fraud and loss of important land documents of members of members of the public.

    A surveyor, Mr Lukman Kasali,  whose office is in Mowe, Ogun State, confirmed that he has had some reprieve since the land documentation was automated by the state government. He recounted how he used to tip people to push his clients’ files, but noted that there was no longer any need to do that as interaction with members of staff was almost nil.

    He said: “My duty now is just to pay the prescribed fees and submit the necessary files and when it is ready, they will contact me, professionals have never had it so good.”

    Another surveyor, Mr Adeyanju Adelekun, had the same testimony.  He said surveyors were experiencing ease of business due to the automation of the  land bureau.

    On Geographic Information System (GIS), Sokefun said they have information on their border areas as accurate as 50 centimetres while inside the estate is as accurate as 80 centimetres. This, she said, is also geared towards accurate land information processing.

    She said staff members of the Bureau have a schedule of training to make them competent and conversant with the new technology.

    Mrs Sokefun also revealed that the Surveyor-Generals and Deputy Governors of Ogun and Lagos states are meeting on border issues relating to Agbara, Ojodu and Akute among others, to  have an amicable settlement on the contentious borders.

    She refuted claims that the state has taken people’s land from developers on the Mowe, Ibafo, Papalanto along the Lagos/Ibadan Expressway. She, however, contended that the law stipulates that the state government owns any land that is within two kilometres on each side.

    Sokefun regretted that before now, some highly placed people got land on discount at ridiculous prices to the extent that 20 hectares sold for N20 million, which was as good as free without any evidence of payment in several cases.  She regretted a case at hand in Papalanto where there are over ‘40 estates’ by signboards, stressing that most of them are land speculators  and warned that the entire left side of the area falls into the state government’s new towns project.

    On the contentious River View estate in Isheri, she once again denied the rumour that the government has cancelled the allocation but blamed the past administration for allocating the area, which it knew to be a water belt and not fit for habitation.

    She said: “OPIC knew River View estate is a water belt, the water there is meant to flow into Ogun River. The whole deal is a scam. It was never supposed to be an estate but they made it so in 2004.

    He added: “Some experts have suggested that we construct artificial lake to check the flooding challenges in the estate but the truth is that we cannot deep our hands into our lean resources to do channelisation for them.”

    She also refuted the allegation of collecting the balance of N250 million from the N700 million promised by President Goodluck Jonathan.

  •  Akpabio  unveils projects

     Akpabio unveils projects

    Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio has changed the skyline of his state  by the number of projects he has delivered since the inception of his administration.

    Speaking at the unveiling of the projects by President Goodluck Jonathan, the governor in a statement signed by his Information Commissioner, Mr Aniekan Umanah, said the latest project is  the new  Governor’s Office, which was  conceived to meet the demands of an ever-changing world.

    ”It is not only ICT compliant; it has all the facilities needed for e governance and contemporary governance. It replaces a building we met, at the inception of this administration, which lacked space for visitors and facilities for the administrative controls  needed in today’s world,” he said.

    On the completion date,  he said though they estimated  18 months but the building was finished in just eight months. According to him, “this is a proof that we are running Government at the speed of light, because we know that time waits for no one’.

    On the pipeline is the  Akwa Ibom State Stadium, which  will be a 30,000 seater stadium with a banquet hall, proximate conveniences for all spectators, restaurants on each floor including other amenities. It is planned to meet global standard in stadium architecture.

    On why his administration is investing in sports, he said the global sports industry is four times larger than the automobile manufac-turing industry, and seven times larger than the film industry.

    According to him, despite a global economic slowdown, a study by Price Waterhouse Coopers predicts a revenue growth rate of 3.7 per cent ($145.3 billion) for the sports industry by 2015 and the state intends to be part of this action.

    The governor  recalled  that the state government  took up the construction of the Ikot Ekpene-Aba Federal Road and the Ikot Ekpene – Itu-Odukpani-Calabar Federal Road  to maximise the Deep Sea Port and the Ibom International Airport, which has facilities for cargo flights.

    Responding President Goodluck Jonathan,  who was the special guest on the occasion, asked other governors to learn from Akpabio  in his infrastructure devlopment  in the state. He said: “In coming to inauguration of the new Governor’s Office, Uyo, and laying the foundation stone of the 30,000-seater Akwa Ibom State Stadium, we celebrate the exemplary leadership and patriotism of Governor Godswill Obot Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State. He has shown us what we can achieve, when we seek pragmatic solutions to our national problems.”

    He also said:  I am not here because this edifice is beautiful; I am here because the principle of democratic accountability is thriving here in Akwa Ibom State. It was this principle, which, apparently, led the Akwa Ibom State Government to partner with the Federal Government and to tar some of the Federal roads in its territory for the benefit of Nigerians and to save the lives of Nigerians. What is morally right, cannot be politically wrong.”

    He confirmed Federal Govern-ment’s readiness to partner with the state  as co-investors in the Akwa Ibom State funded Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facility at the Ibom International Airport, and to turn it into a National Hanger.

    The character of the stadium,  according to the statement, is created by its unique physical appearance that will be enclosed by a white triangular shaped out skin that wraps around the entire stands area made of acrylic glass.

    The main criteria of the stadium concept he said are classic multi-purpose stadium layout with running tracks, two-tiered seating arrangement excellent viewing conditions, arena with football pitch and eight-lane 400-metre standard track including complete athletic facilities in the segment of the field and access system of the tiers with “Vomitories”, among others.

    The Information Commissioner also revealed that the governor’s office has, among others, the governor’s conference hall, courtesy call room lounge, multimedia studio Executive Council chambers with video conferencing facilities, among others.

  •  Akpabio unveils infrastructural projects

    Akwa Ibom State Governor, Chief Godswill Obot  Akpabio, has changed the skyline of his state  by the number of projects he has delivered since the inception of his administration.

    Speaking at the unveiling of the projects by President Goodluck Jonathan, the governor in a statement signed by his Information Commissioner, Mr Aniekan Umanah, said the latest project is  the new  Governor’s Office, which was  conceived to meet the demands of an ever-changing world.

    ”It is not only ICT compliant; it has all the facilities needed for e governance and contemporary governance. It replaces a building we met, at the inception of this administration, which lacked space for visitors and facilities for the administrative controls  needed in today’s world,” he said.

    On the completion date,  he said though they estimated  18 months but the building was finished in just eight months. According to him, “this is a proof that we are running Government at the speed of light, because we know that time waits for no one’.

    On the pipeline is the  Akwa Ibom State Stadium, which  will be a 30,000 seater stadium with a banquet hall, proximate conveniences for all spectators, restaurants on each floor including other amenities. It is planned to meet global standard in stadium architecture.

    On why his administration is investing in sports, he said the global sports industry is four times larger than the automobile manufac-turing industry, and seven times larger than the film industry.

    According to him, despite a global economic slowdown, a study by Price Waterhouse Coopers predicts a revenue growth rate of 3.7 per cent ($145.3 billion) for the sports industry by 2015 and the state intends to be part of this action.

    The governor  recalled  that the state government  took up the construction of the Ikot Ekpene-Aba Federal Road and the Ikot Ekpene – Itu-Odukpani-Calabar Federal Road  to maximise the Deep Sea Port and the Ibom International Airport, which has facilities for cargo flights.

    Responding President Goodluck Jonathan,  who was the special guest on the occasion, asked other governors to learn from Akpabio  in his infrastructure devlopment  in the state. He said: “In coming to inauguration of the new Governor’s Office, Uyo, and laying the foundation stone of the 30,000-seater Akwa Ibom State Stadium, we celebrate the exemplary leadership and patriotism of Governor Godswill Obot Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State. He has shown us what we can achieve, when we seek pragmatic solutions to our national problems.”

    He also said:  I am not here because this edifice is beautiful; I am here because the principle of democratic accountability is thriving here in Akwa Ibom State. It was this principle, which, apparently, led the Akwa Ibom State Government to partner with the Federal Government and to tar some of the Federal roads in its territory for the benefit of Nigerians and to save the lives of Nigerians. What is morally right, cannot be politically wrong.”

    He confirmed Federal Govern-ment’s readiness to partner with the state  as co-investors in the Akwa Ibom State funded Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facility at the Ibom International Airport, and to turn it into a National Hanger.

    The character of the stadium,  according to the statement, is created by its unique physical appearance that will be enclosed by a white triangular shaped out skin that wraps around the entire stands area made of acrylic glass.

    The main criteria of the stadium concept he said are classic multi-purpose stadium layout with running tracks, two-tiered seating arrangement excellent viewing conditions, arena with football pitch and eight-lane 400-metre standard track including complete athletic facilities in the segment of the field and access system of the tiers with “Vomitories”, among others.

    The Information Commissioner also revealed that the governor’s office has, among others, the governor’s conference hall, courtesy call room lounge, multimedia studio Executive Council chambers with video conferencing facilities, among others.

  • ‘Why buildings collapse’

    ‘Why buildings collapse’

    Faulty design, lack of comprehensive sub-soil investigation, quackery, use of substandard materials, poor workmanship, non-adherence to professional advice and  greed, have been identified as some of the reasons buildings collapse.

    Chairman, Building Collapse Prevention Guild (BCPG), Mr Kunle Awobodu, stated this at the 25th Annual Conference and General Meeting of the Nigerian Institution of Structural Engineers (NIStructE), in Abuja at the weekend.

    Speaking on Built environment professionals and incessant building collapse, he listed other common denominators in diagnosing building collapse to include copied design, non-adherence to approved design, quackery, use of substandard materials, poor workmanship, professional incompetence, cognitive dissonance, ignorance and pilfering.

    Others, according to him, are construction in crisis situation, unrealistic timelines, nocturnal concrete work/concreting in the rain, improper budget and financial control, change in use, poor drainage system, fire incident, lack of maintenance and force majeure.

    He called on professionals in the sector to join the association to save the sector from total collapse.

    Awobodu said the guild is promoting unity among built environment professionals, pointing out that a house divided against itself cannot sustain its relevance.

    According to him, the onus is on the professionals to turn the tide of  decay in the sector and save the lives of the people.

    Members of the guild at the event included first female town planner in Nigeria, Mrs. Catherine Kehinde George; a quantity surveyor, Mr Edwin Umolu, President of NIStructE, Mr Busola Awojobi; and immediate past president, Mr Victor Oyenuga.

    Awobodu said  BCPG, in the last four years, has been championing campaigns against building collapse menace, mobilising all stakeholders, especially built environment professionals and artisans including concrete workers, iron benders, block makers, and carpenters on the need to eradicate cases of collapsed building in the sector.

    He said the weakness of professionals in the built environment had been identified as their inability to create time for activities that will collectively benefit them.

    “We need to overcome the beggarly attitude and endeavour to develop a strong voice and necessary control in the construction industry that remains the nation’s economic barometer. We should not leave our fate completely in the hands of politicians, who are not committed to promoting standard construction but more interested in the juicy end of building contracts,”Awobodu stressed.

  • How to make the new housing policy work

    How to make the new housing policy work

    The goal of the new housing policy is to ensure that Nigerians own or have access to decent, safe and sanitary housing in a healthy environment with services at affordable cost and secured tenure. However, surveyors say except something is done urgently, the new policy may go the way of past ones, OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE reports

    The new housing policy is about the third robust attempt at having a policy that will address the poor housing provision in the country.

    The previous ones were dogged by poor decisions, such as the frequent changes in the status, tenure, nomenclature and mandate of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development.

    In a paper, entitled: The New National Housing Policy, an effective framework for its implementation by the pioneer Managing Director of Federal Housing Authority (FHA) and Shelter-Afrique, Nairobi, Kenya, Mr  S. P. O. Fortune-Ebie, said the old housing policy didn’t attempt to resolve the lingering gap that stood at about 17 million units in deficit.

    Speaking at a housing summit organised by the Nigerian Institution of Estate Surveyors & Valuers (NIESV), he said the old housing policy didn’t address land access and financing, which are keys to housing acquisition, including the lack of appropriate identification and recommendation of construction methodology that is appropriate for the country to increase her housing stock.

    He argued that no nation has ever solved its housing problems by a few privileged individuals building their mansions, but rather, it is achieved by the central government directly encouraging the production of houses by pushing out favourable policies that will encourage not only private sector participation but creating a functional and virile mortgage sector that will enable people with verifiable means of income own houses and pay in the long term.

    Fortune-Ebie, a surveyor,  recalled that as the pioneer  managing director of FESTAC Town, Lagos, the agency targeted the poor, middle class and the rich  and regretted that succeeding governments couldn’t continue with the idea of the town.

    He predicted that if the feat had been replicated in other states, the bourgeoning 17 million housing gap would have been bridged as the houses that sold for N9,000 30 years ago, are now bought at N60 million.

    He said: “As an integrated process, the housing delivery demands a coordinated  and integrated actors in public and private sector of the economy. Lack of effective coordination and integration of efforts between the housing sector and other relevant ministries, departments and agencies have been the bane of housing development in the country.”

    He called for the review of the policy at the end of four years aside the impact assessment, which he canvassed should be carried out bi-annually.

    Minister of Land Housing and Urban Development, Ms Ama Pepple, said the concern of government in this new policy is in funding availability, mortgage risk environment, access to financing, improved land titling processes and housing supply. She said her ministry is working with foreign and local partners and the financial services sector to develop a mortgage liquidity facility to make long term funds available to Primary Mortgage Banks.

    He said the combined forces of the government and the private sector would add about one million housing units to the national housing stock within the next three years.

    The minister, who was represented by  a staff member of the ministry Mrs Margret Okolo called on the National Council of State to make regulations under section 46 of the Land Use act to help the implementation of the Act besides addressing the challenge of capacity building for artisans in the construction industry.

    She stressed the need to put in place vocational training pro-grammes to address their deficiency.

    Earlier, Chairman, NIESV, Faculty of Housing, Chief Kola Akomolede, regretted that housing issues are not taken seriously by the government. He noted the miserly budgetary housing provisions of less than one per cent by the Federal Government while many state government’s fail to have a housing ministry.

    He criticised the argument that the private sector should build houses for the people and wondered how a developer who is in business to make profit will build subsidised houses for the poor, which should be the purview of the government.

    Akomolede called on the government to confront the three major impediments that stand in the way of access to decent housing for the people, which he noted, as lack of access to land at affordable prices, lack of mortgage for would-be house owners either to build or buy and the high cost of building materials.

    A lawyer, Akintoye Adeoye, who spoke on “Private sector role in provision of housing for the masses under the new housing policy”, said  two major essentials  of land and finance are required for the success of private sector effective participation in housing.

    He, however, noted that the impediments to its achievement include corruption, bureaucracy in land administration, challenges of getting relevant bills passed by the National Assembly, lack of funded and viable secondary mortgage market, insufficient data on housing, lack of sufficient incentives for private sector participation and insufficient data on housing.

  • Stakeholders seek coordinated regulation

    Stakeholders have called for coordination in the regulation of practices in the oil and gas industry so as to engender the needed growth.

    They made the call at the PSRG-Richardson Health, Safety, Security and Environment (HSSE) forum held in Lagos.

    The forum noted that the establishment of various regulatory agencies who are working at cross-purposes was not in the best interest of the industry.

    It therefore suggested that the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) be adequately equipped and empowered to effectively perform its regulatory functions in the oil and gas sector.

    The forum also recommended that a division of the Nigeria Police Force, which is to be dedicated completely to the oil and gas industry should be created and well equipped to enhance security of operations, installations and assets.

    In his presentation entitled: “HSSE: Confronting the Challenges in the Nigerian Oil and Gas Environment,” Emiy Ikuru, Managing Director of Foisi Global Investment Ltd urged the development of a measurable and sustainable HSSE management system in the oil and gas industry. He called for the implementation of a security policy that meets the challenges of increasing crime and effective response strategies to emergencies that threaten the safety of staff, assets and the general public.

    Also speaking on the “Challenges of protecting oil and gas industry assets: An operator’s perspective,” Capt. Albert Oti (rtd) said an effective approach to pipeline protection would involve local communities in guarding the pipelines. It will also require the deployment of technology such as sensors, which are globally used to monitor pipelines.

    On the types of security breaches and threats prevalent in the Nigerian oil and gas industry, he listed them to include facility vandalisation, armed attacks on personnel and installations, kidnapping and hostage taking and the disruption of operations. Others are community protest action, crude oil theft and illegal bunkering, cyber crime and electronic infractions.

    To address these challenges, Oti urged operators to develop an effective oil and gas infrastructure protection strategy and acquire risk assessment and warning capabilities. He said there is the need for an integration of information sharing and control in the security of oil and gas infrastructure between operators and relevant security agencie.

    Head of HSE at the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Dorothy Bassey,who was represented by Ijeoma Onyeri, spoke on approaches to sustainability in her paper entitled: “Developing a winning formula for sustainability in the oil and gas industry.

    She listed innovation, transparency, taking responsibility and maintaining standards as some of the key elements required to develop a winning and sustainable business in the oil and gas industry.

  • Lagos explains slow pace of work on Badagry expressway

    Lagos State Government has explained the reason for the purported slow pace of work on the Lagos Badagry Expressway by CCECC, the firm handling the project.

    A statement from the Ministry of Works and Infrastructure said the government was not unmindful of the challenges to many users of the road.

    It said the plan was to reconstruct the stretch from Eric Moore through to Seme Border but it has been phased due to the huge financial implications.

    The statement said the Lot 1, which is the first phase of the project, demonstrates the vision of the Fashola administration on the road.

    The second phase, being handled by CCECC, has further been broken into three because of the financial position of the state.

    This phase will be from Mazamaza to Okokomaiko.

    It emphasised that the Lot 2A (from MazaMaza to Okokomaiko) was awarded late last year and the contractor mobilised early this year, noting that the stretch in this phase is highly built up requiring extensive removal of obstruction and relocation of services.

    “This is what is going on and is being construed as slow pace of work,” the statement said.

    Furthermore it said aside from the removal of the obstructing structures on the Right of Way of the road, the state government has since started the relocation of essential services on this axis, which include water mains, PHCN facilities, PTOs facilities and the like.  These facilities the ministry said are not easily replaced due to their importance and the nature of the new designs adopted to make them viable and relevant in future development.

    The statement stated that beyond this, however, the responsibility for maintaining the road belongs to the Federal Government.

    The state government appealed to commuters to be patient with it. It pledged its commitment to build a first class road.

  •  2Face buys two properties  from Haven Homes

     2Face buys two properties from Haven Homes

    Multiple award winning musical artiste Innocent Idibia popularly called 2face and his wife, Annie have bought two properties from the developer of lifestyle living, Haven Homes.

    In a statement, which followed the Exchange of Contracts ceremony that took place at the Magodo Office of Haven Homes, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Mr Tayo Sonuga, said: “There is little need restating the fact that we build for celebrities and high society people. They are in the best position to appreciate our alluring designs and beautiful homes because they are widely travelled. They have the tastes and the means to acquire what they desire.

    ‘’The confidence displayed by 2Face in buying not just one but two units of properties from us is a watershed of our achievements in creating lifestyle homes and earning our reputation as celebrity developers”.

    On why he decided to patronise Haven Homes where he bought two units, Idibia said: “Haven Homes builds very beautiful homes that are fast becoming a trend among celebrities. You will marvel at the increasing number of celebrities who are buying and living in their lifestyle homes. I have only identified with a very good product that is made in Nigeria and as its ambassador I will promote the company and take the brand to other celebrities”.

    No sooner than the deeds were signed, when an excited 2face immediately sent a broadcast tweet ‘Just bought me 2 Haven Homes’ attaching the picture of the deeds signing ceremony.

    Ayo Makun (comedian popularly known as AY) and his wife, Mabel, are also celebrities who bought their new home from Haven Homes.

    Haven Homes already enjoys relationship with other celebrities, such as Ini Edo, Funke Akindele, Oge Okoye, Desmond Elliot, Bob Manuel Uduokwu, Aki and Paw-Paw, who have graced the inauguration of their homes and visited their various show homes located on the Island and Mainland of Lagos State.

    The company according to the statement, recently delivered some units of its Sandringham Terrace, a project located in Lekki Phase 1. The first phase of another Lekki project called Richmond Gate comprising 18 units is almost ready for completion and work has just started on the Second Phase comprising 32 units.

    In conformity to its signature design, the typical Haven Home unit, according to the statement, is a beautifully crafted work of art with the exquisitely sculptured five-bedroom house using modern architecture to create a fine balance between brick and glass. The exterior and interior spaces are delivered with the highest precision of sharp angles and complimented with ornately arranged lights.

    The master bedroom is designed as a private retreat in the home planned in double volume spaces with private suspended galleries, double spa (Jacuzzi), private living room/ study room on the upper floor while the lower floors house the king sized bed, shower/WC and walk in wardrobes.

  • Pepple inaugurates  106- housing unit estate

    Pepple inaugurates 106- housing unit estate

    The Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Amal Pepple at the weekend inaugurated 106-housing unit Crown Court Estate, a concept of Crown Realities Plc in Mabushi area of Abuja.

    She expressed satisfaction with the developers, stating that this is what a home should look like. The estate with 106 housing units of detached and semi-detached houses as well as luxury condominiums with first class finishes and facilities on three hectares of land,  is a first step in the move by the company to build more houses in the Federal Capital Territory.

    She said housing is paramount in the agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan’s plan for the nation, going by what shelter does to an individual.

    She said: “We want to concentrate on providing houses for low income earners especially those in the informal sector and we believe that even if it’s for them it shouldn’t be of low quality,” she stressed.

    The Managing Director, Crown Realties, Mr Darl Uzu, said the estate is the company’s way of registering presence in the property market in the FCT and tackling housing shortage in the country.

    “The estate is safe for residents as the company had gone an extra mile, presently securing life and property has become a major problem in most urban centres in the world.

    “The estate has its own independent power project with three synchronised generators of 600KVA capacity each; elaborate waterworks with 550,000-litre fibre storage tank with a treatment plant, an overhead fibre tank, laundry mart, and shopping complex.

    “The recreational area has the club house that features the swimming pool, changing room and gymnasium. There are also fire hydrants and extinguishers in strategic locations within the estate in addition to a telephone exchange that is connected to every apartment with Internet facilities, as well as pre-installed DSTV connections.”

    Uzu explained that the company opted for pre-installed air conditioners in the apartments so that the beauty of the estate would not be destroyed by individual installation of air conditioning units.

    Chairman, Crown Realities, Ferdinand Alabraba, said their developments are always futuristic, and the company had taken its standard a notch higher to development of the estate.

    He added that it is the first in the FCT, adding that they have plans to embark build more.

  • Engineers seek legislation on design, construction

    Engineers seek legislation on design, construction

    THE Association of Consulting Engineers (ACEN) has advocated legislation on engineering design, construction and consultancy services in construction industry.

    Prof. V.O.S. Olunloyo made the call in a paper entitled: Advocacy for legislation on engineering design, construction and consultancy in Nigeria, which he delivered at the 34th Annual Conference/Annual General Meeting (AGM) of ACEN.   Speaking on the theme Nigerian content: Where are we, Olunloyo, who is a consulting engineer, said indigenous engineers have been relegated to the  background in favour of  foreign firms due to their mono-disciplinary in composition and interests.

    He said: “Most firms have less than 20 professionals on their role and hardly any with staff strength of 100. We need to be open to the idea of forming consortia when bidding for projects. Evidently, there is marginalisation in favour of multinational or local representatives of multinational firms because they are generally broad-based and multidisciplinary”.

    Olunloyo observed the challenge of negotiating a fair scale of fees because of the poor image they have generated due to the size of their firms, which are not competitive.

    He canvassed the need to form alliances with other groups, such as the Nigeria Society of Engineers (NSE), Association of Professional Bodies and others to form critical mass as a pressure group.

    The consulting engineer called for legislation to make provision for outsourcing a stipulated minimum percentage of the project- work given to multinationals to local consultants and by extension make it a condition for registration.  He regretted the absence of institutional organs for involving local professionals in major economic activities and projects.

    He said the government should insist on the auditing and documentation of the use of local consultants and personnel at every stage of an engineering project in the country.

    Special effort, he said, should be made to ensure that the proposed legislation covers emerging technology to create a niche for engineers in the global market especially in the area of software.

    The don said care should be taken to ensure lawmakers are aware that enough experts reside in the country and should therefore to be given first chance and final say in matters of consultancy of public and private building projects.

    A past president of ACEN,  Dr Joseph Folayan, who spoke on The integrity of Nigerian  engineers, said engineers must perform under a standard of professional behavior that requires adherence to the highest principles of ethical conduct, have full regard to the needs of society by protecting  public interest and  preserving the integrity of the profession.

    He said for the public to appreciate the worth of an engineer,  the national engineering body provide an impartial service of high quality in accordance with the national engineering code, co-operate with association in any inquiry with regard to a complaint brought against a member under this code of conduct or any other misconduct.

    Besides, he said the integrity of a particular professional is seen in the code of conduct of the profession and its adherence by her members.

    Folayan urged his colleagues to ensure that their principals and staff conduct themselves in such manner to uphold and advance the integrity, honour and dignity of the engineering profession.

    He added that they must stick to the high ethical standards as enschrined in ACEN Articles and Act in professional matters as a faithful agent or trustee for employers or clients.

    Folayan also insisted that  to ensure integrity engineers must  not affix their signatures or seals to any engineering plan or document dealing with subject matter in which they lack competence by virtue of education or experience or to any such plan or document not reviewed or prepared under their supervisory control.

    Folayan noted that the first law of the engineering profession states that an engineer shall  hold paramount the safety, health and welfare of the public while the second says: “An engineer  should  ensure  honesty with himself  and restrict his services to only areas of  his competence.”