Tag: Afriland fire

  • Afriland fire: Rethinking safety in Nigeria’s high-rise future

    Afriland fire: Rethinking safety in Nigeria’s high-rise future

    Sir: The Afriland Tower fire of September 12, will be remembered not only for its immediate destruction but for the debate it has reignited about fire safety in Nigerian high-rises. In a city racing to build taller and faster, the question is no longer whether growth will continue, but whether that growth will be safe, sustainable, and resilient against preventable hazards.

    As a Nigerian civil engineer practicing construction management in the United States, I have seen how fire hazards in tall buildings often stem from preventable lapses. The absence of sprinkler systems, reliance on combustible cladding, poor smoke compartmentalization, and neglected alarm or evacuation systems all magnify the danger. In too many cases, blocked or poorly marked exits leave occupants with little chance of survival when seconds can mean the difference between escape and tragedy.

    The scale of the challenge is undeniable. Lagos, home to Africa’s fastest-growing skyline, is also one of its most vulnerable urban centers for fire risk. The Lagos State Fire and Rescue Service records hundreds of outbreaks annually, many in commercial or multi-story buildings. A 2024 safety audit revealed that over 30 percent of inspected structures lacked adequate detection or suppression systems. In one reporting year, at least 82 lives were lost and property worth more than N25.37 billion was destroyed; in another, losses exceeded N19.5 billion. These figures demonstrate that fire is not just a safety concern but also an economic burden that undermines livelihoods and public confidence.

    Global best practices point to clear solutions. Data from the U.S. National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) shows that buildings with automatic sprinklers experience 89 percent fewer civilian deaths from fire than those without. More than 90 percent of fires in such buildings are contained within the room of origin, significantly limiting casualties and property loss. These statistics highlight a reality Nigeria cannot ignore: prevention saves lives and protects economies.

    Unfortunately, research within Nigeria underscores significant shortcomings. A 2023 study of Abuja shopping malls, published in F1000Research, found that many lacked active fire protection devices such as smoke detectors and sprinklers, or had systems in poor condition. Passive protections, including fire-rated doors and compartmentalization, were often inadequate. Another study from Covenant University, published in the International Journal of Safety and Security Engineering, showed that many students did not know the location of fire exits or safety signage, underscoring the need for education, drills, and preparedness alongside better infrastructure.

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    Strengthening Nigeria’s fire safety framework requires collaboration. The Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA), tasked with enforcing construction standards, plays a pivotal role, but its efforts must be reinforced by technical expertise and advocacy from professional bodies. Organizations such as the Nigerian Society of Engineers, the Institute of Safety Professionals of Nigeria (ISPON), the American Society of Safety Professionals (ASSP) Nigeria Chapter, and the World Safety Organization (WSO) Nigeria can work in tandem with LASBCA to push for stricter enforcement, standardized certifications, regular audits, and ongoing professional training. Together, regulators and practitioners can embed fire safety into the DNA of Nigeria’s built environment.

    Some stakeholders argue that advanced fire systems and fire-tested materials increase construction costs. Yet the cost of inaction is far higher: billions lost in property damage, delayed investments, and most devastatingly, human lives cut short. Safe buildings are not optional add-ons; they are the foundation of sustainable, resilient growth.

    The Afriland Tower fire must not be remembered only for its destruction. It should mark a turning point in how Nigeria approaches building safety. By embedding fire prevention measures into design, construction, and maintenance, the nation can protect lives, safeguard investments, and ensure its skylines stand as symbols of progress rather than peril.

    •Joyce M.O. Lewis,USA.

  • Afriland fire renews call for Nigerian Construction Act — Aderibigbe

    Afriland fire renews call for Nigerian Construction Act — Aderibigbe

    Abiola Aderibigbe

    In the wake of the tragic fire at Afriland Towers on Lagos Island last week, concerns over building safety have been pushed sharply into the public eye once more.

    The fire, which claimed lives and damaged property, is yet another reminder that existing laws, however well-intentioned, are failing to prevent disasters — even in high-profile and supposedly well-maintained structures.

    Abiola Aderibigbe, global legal practitioner and PhD candidate with sector-wide expertise in the built environment, has renewed his call for a comprehensive Nigerian Construction Act.

    “This isn’t enough to mourn,” he said. “We must act to ensure that what happened in Afriland and elsewhere does not keep repeating.”

    Despite Nigeria’s National Building Code and other statutes, enforcement remains inconsistent. Major buildings, especially in Lagos, which should be held to high standards, are still vulnerable. The Afriland incident exposes structural and regulatory weaknesses: overlapping mandates, unclear responsibilities, and enforcement loopholes.

    Just days before the fire, on Friday, 12 September 2025, a building collapsed in Yaba, Lagos — another grim statistic in a longstanding trend: over 650 building collapses and at least 1,600 lives lost since 1974, according to the Building Collapse Prevention Guild. With the construction sector contributing 4.74% of GDP in Q1 2025, these failures are not only moral and social catastrophes — they are economic liabilities.

    Aderibigbe maintains that the current patchwork of laws, regulations, and standards must be replaced or significantly refined by a unified, well-enforced law — a Nigerian Construction Act. Such legislation, he contends, would provide statutory force to health, safety, and environmental standards, clearer accountability lines, and predictable legal obligations.

    His proposed Act rests on five pillars: National Contractor Registration & Grading — Ensuring only capable, qualified contractors handle construction work, especially in critical and high-risk areas; Health, Safety & Environmental Standards with Real Penalties — Legal repercussions for safety breaches, not just guidelines or advisory rules; Governance & Anti-corruption Safeguards — To ensure procurement, approvals and inspections are transparent and free from malpractice; Statutory Payment Timelines & Adjudication — To reduce delays, non-payment, and corner-cutting in projects due to financial bottlenecks; Skills Transfer & Local Content — Ensuring domestic capacity is not overlooked, and that local professionals are empowered, certified, and held to high standards.

    He emphasised that Nigeria already has examples overseas — countries like the UK, Australia, and Singapore — showing that unified legislation in construction boosts safety, reduces accidents, and increases investor trust.

    The Afriland fire isn’t isolated. It follows a string of collapses and disasters that have exposed systemic risk: in Yaba, elsewhere in Lagos, and across Nigeria. Each catastrophe amplifies loss of lives, livelihoods, investor confidence, and the credibility of regulatory institutions.

    Nigeria also faces an ever-widening infrastructure financing gap — estimated at more than US$100 billion annually. Investors, development banks, and donors need legal predictability. Every failure undermines confidence.

    A unified law — the Construction Act — would help close gaps in regulation, ensure enforceability, provide clearer standardisation, protect lives, and help unlock capital.

    “It is not sufficient to express condolences,” Aderibigbe said, “We must legislate change. Every death, every collapse, every avoidable fire calls for more than words — it demands action.”

    Government officials, state agencies, legislators, and stakeholders must agree on a law that is clear, enforceable, and backed by penalties. The time is now — for safer buildings, stronger trust, and a more resilient Nigeria.