Tag: Building collapse:

  • How to avoid building collapse, by experts

    The Lagos State chapter of the Nigerian Institution of Civil Engineers (NICE) has proffered solution to incessant building collapse across the country.

    It said there is need for a resident civil engineer to be stationed at every construction site for proper monitoring.

    The civil engineers spoke at the weekend during a “Walk for Fitness” with the theme: Walk for Stability of Structures.

    The walk began from the Lagos State Fire Service office at Alausa in Ikeja, the state capital, through Oregun. The walkers turned at Ikeja Under Bridge to Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Toyin Street, Allen Avenue and back to the fire service.

    NICE Chairperson Lola Adetona said the walk was meant to sensitise the public on the need for structural stability in buildings.

    She said: “We are not happy with the incessant collapse of structures. We are saying ‘stop the use of quacks and patronise registered engineers’. Let the professionals be in charge of building construction.”

    Mrs Adetona said workers on site, who are the less privileged, are mostly affected when buildings collapse.

    “We are saying no more collapse of structures. People should patronise registered engineers. We, the civil engineers, are available for public service. Reach out to us via our social media platforms,” she said.

    The chairman urged the government to legislate “that for every building being erected, a registered civil engineer must be resident there for supervision”.

    With the legislation in place, she said, building collapse would reduce.

    NICE former National Chairman Robbie James Owivry urged the public to patronise registered civil engineers.

    The government, he said, must check the activities of quacks through enabling laws.

    Owivry said: “The government must enact laws that will put quacks in their place. If there is a law that prevents quacks from venturing into building construction, you can be assured that building collapse will reduce.

    “The public must know that civil engineers are trained to handle construction projects. When somebody is ill, he won’t run to a barber for treatment. It is unfortunate that the public is not engaging registered civil engineers for advice and supervision of their projects. Rather, they just engage artisans, who have little knowledge about the mechanism of construction. The fact that they work with registered engineers does not make them engineers.”

    Founding member and past President of Association of Professional Women Engineers of Nigeria (APWEN) Mrs. Idiat Amusu said building collapse would become story if Nigerians could refrain from patronising quacks.

    She called for collaboration between the government and operators for a liveable environment.

    Mrs Amusu noted that building developers should be made to comply with approved building regulations.

    “Currently, building collapse has reduced to a great extent, but the engineers will not relent in advocacy and efforts toward attaining a zero per cent building collapse.

    “Let the authority responsible for granting building plan approval review and reduce the requirements and costs of obtaining the document to make it more affordable. Most people fail to obtain building plans because of the cost implications,” she said.

    Lagos State Safety Commission (LSSC) Director-General Mr. Hakeem Dickson urged the public to always engage professionals to build their structures.

    “Our concern is to ensure that safety is maintained at all times at work places.

    “It is not until a building collapses we start shedding tears. We need to sit up and continuously push for proactive measures to ensure a safety environment at all times,” he said.

  • Building collapse: Minister inaugurates inquiry panel 

    Worried by the incessant cases of building collapse in the Federal Capital Territory, the minister Malam Muhammad Bello has inaugurated a panel of inquiry to unravel the cause of the building collapse at Plot 711, Cadastral Zone B04, Jabi District, Abuja.

    The FCT Minister, who was represented at the occasion by the Permanent Secretary, Sir Chinyeaka Ohaa, said the FCT Administration, as a responsible and responsive administration, was committed to unraveling the causes of the unfortunate incident with a view to stemming future occurrence.

    He said some officers directly in charge of monitoring the project site have been suspended pending the completion of investigations.

    The Minister disclosed that the committee, which has three weeks to complete its assignment, has been charged with the responsibility of assessing the quality of the subsoil, foundations and designs that were available for the structure, establish the quality of supervision and nature of construction materials used as well as the experience of the technical personnel at the site.

    The Committee is also expected to assess the level of regulation at the site and recommend appropriate sanction against any person found wanting.

    The Panel which is Chaired by the Director General and Chief Executive officer of the Nigeria Building and Road Research Institute, Prof. Danladi S. Matawal, has retired Director of Engineering Services, FCDA, Engr. S. O Ugonabo; the MD, Fola Consult – a Planning Firm; Tpl S.A. Olajide, MD, 2-Habit Concept – Architectural Firm and Arch Philip Z. Iortyer as members.

    Also included in the panel are representatives of Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria, (COREN), Architects Registration Council of Nigeria (ARCON), Town Planners Registration Council of Nigeria (TOPREC) and Council of Registered Builders of Nigeria (CORBON), as well as the FCTA General Counsel, Barr. Mohammed Babangida Umar, among others.

    According to a statement issued by the minister’s Chief Press Secretary, Cosmas Uzodinma, Speaking after the inauguration ceremony, Chairman of the Panel, Prof. Matawal, stressed that the frequency of building collapse in Nigeria was unacceptable given the level of professionalism in the industry in the country.

    He commended the present FCT Administration for the reduction of the incidence of building collapse in the Territory, noting that the last time this happened was in August 2016.

    He recalled that in 2012 alone, there were over 20 recorded cases, adding that the fact that this has reduced was as a result of the efforts of the present Administration to tame the tide.

    Prof. Matawal appreciated the confidence reposed in the Committee members and assured that the Panel will give the assignment the seriousness it deserves and perform its work with decorum, sincerity and attention to details.

    He said the committee will also work with a vision for the future to ensure that occurrences of this nature which were very much avoidable would be addressed by its report.

    It would be recalled that a three floor structure under construction in Jabi District collapsed on Friday, August 17, 2018 leaving three persons dead while six others sustained various degrees of injuries.

  • Architects council unveils measures to curb building collapse

    The Architects Registration Council of Nigeria (ARCON) has thrown its weight behind efforts to end building collapse.

    It also sympathised with victims of the building collapse in Jabi in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    In a statement by  its President, Dipo Ajayi, ARCON observed that past incident  showed  that developers and some institutions hire unregistered persons as architects/consultants to  execute their projects.

    To resolve the problem, the body has set up ARCON Projects Registration Number (APRN), which would be issued to architects,  and would be written on their projects to certify that they executed them.

    Ajayi explained that the APRN is intended to combat the scourge of building failure and collapse  by eliminating quackery. It is also to ensure that only registered firms submit designs for planning and approval.

    He said architects and firms which are registered with the Council are to submit building plans for approval/implementation and are responsible for the supervision of their designs. This measure, he further explained, is to complement, among other things, the old practice of submitting buildings with copies of the architect’s practice licence; affixing of ARCON stamps, signed by the architect and sealed (with the architect’s ARCON seal) on each sheet of the drawings submitted for approval; a letter from the client stating that the architect shall be responsible for the supervision of their architectural design during the construction period; the APRN on each sheet of the drawings submitted for approval and the placement of the APRN number, together with the architect’s (or architectural firm’s name/registration-number, on the project sign board upon commencement of construction.

    Ajayi said the ARCON also plans to have an enforcement and compliance unit which is to ensure that only registered architects handle architectural projects in the country and in consonance with the extant laws.

    ”These measures put in place by the Council are to complement the content and spirit of the National Building Codes which are to ensure that only professionals with the requisite knowledge and expertise of the building process are engaged to carry out building projects and are duly governed by the various Acts in our statute books. The council is working in concert with other interest groups to get the built environment properly policed to avoid or reduce to the barest minimum the issue of building collapse and its attendant effect on the developer and the national psyche,” the ARCON chief said.

     

  • How block moulders can avert building collapse

    The Lagos State Government has warned block moulders to comply with standards in order to curb building collapse. The government, Lagos State Material Testing Laboratory (LSMTL) General Manager Olalekan Ajani said remained committed to zero tolerance to building collapse.

    Ajani spoke during the annual conference of National Association of Block Moulders of Nigeria (NABMON) at Dangote Cement Plant in Ibese, Ogun State.

    He said the government was ready to partner with NABMON to sanitise the industry.

    The government, he said, had been working towards actualising its vision of zero tolerance to building and civil engineering infrastructure collapse.

    Ajani urged the block moulders to conform to specifications already given by the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON).

    “LSMTL wants to assist block moulders get good materials in moulding their blocks to conform with minimum standards by SON. Some of the materials which will include water, sand and cement must be certified,” he said.

    NABMON National President Rashidi Adebowale appealed to his members to comply with the quality assurance of materials testing laboratories in their respective states.

    He decried the high rate of non-compliance to standards among majority of block moulders.

    “Majority of block moulders are in the habit of making substandard blocks and do not want to register with our association,” he said.

    Adebowale called on the government to enforce the law governing their operations, adding that they should stop issuing trade permit to individual block moulders.

    The Quality Assurance Officer of Dangote Cement, Saka Abiola, promised that he would keep to the standards of International Organisation for Standardisation as being championed by SON.

  • Building collapse: How girl, 9, died on birthday eve

    A victim of Saturday’s building collapse in Agege, Lagos State, would have turned nine yesterday, if not for the tragedy.

    Sherifat Olalere was one of the two victims of the collapsed building at 9, Abeje Street, Markaz, Agege.

    She was said to be drinking water in the kitchen when it collapsed on her.

    The other victim, Toyin Ogundimu, 35, died when the kitchen wall fell on her. Ogundimu lived in the house with her husband and children.

    Sherifat’s father, The Nation learnt, had told her and her siblings to stay in the mosque opposite their house till he returned home.

    The late Sherifat went home to take water when the building fell.

    A resident, who identified herself as Funmi, said Sherifat’s father told his children to stay in the mosque all day.

    “I learnt that Sherifat’s father told all his children not to stay in the house. He told them to stay in the mosque which is opposite the house; maybe he already sensed danger. Sherifat  and her siblings were all eating in the mosque when she went into the house to drink water; It is unfortunate that that was the last time we would all see her,” she said.

    A woman, who was washing clothes,  ran out when she saw the wall coming down.

    The building was sealed off yesterday; all the occupants have moved out.  Many gathered in groups discussing what happened in hushed tones. A tenant, Mustapha Salaudeen, was injured.

    One of the occupants, Tayo Adekunle, said it was unfortunate that the collapse led to the death of her neighbours.

    “I cooked at the kitchen on Friday; I also had my bath in the bathroom on Saturday morning before going to work. I was surprised to receive a call while I was at work on Saturday morning that my house has collapsed.  I am  yet to get over the shock.”

    She said she never noticed anything wrong with the building since she moved into it about a year ago.

    Adekunle said: “The only thing I know is that before I left the house that Saturday morning, I saw a bricklayer who was meant to fix some things in the building.  I did not know what the bricklayer was billed to do, but I was told that it was while the bricklayer was still trying to gather all he would need to fix the house that it collapsed.

    “It is so painful that Sherifat is dead because she was meant to celebrate her nine years birthday today (yesterday).  She stays here with her parents and four other siblings. Everybody living here has left.”

    A neighbour, Muhammed Aminu, said he was among those who took Ogundimu’s body for burial.

    “When I heard that this building has collapsed and led to Ogundimu’s death, I was in a sad state because Ogundimu, her husband and children attend the same mosque with me (Tijani Mosque). Being a Muslim, we had to bury her immediately in a burial ground in Agege here.”

    He described the late Ogundimu as a nice person, adding that the entire family is good.

    “She and her husband would always be at the mosque at every praying time with their children,” Aminu said.

  • Photos: Two dead as a storey-building collapses in Lagos

    A 35-year-old woman and 11-year-old girl were on Saturday confirmed dead, after a storey building collapsed in Lagos.

    The building situated at No. 9 Abeje Street Markaz, Agege Local Government Area, was gathered to have been marked for distressed by the Lagos State government before caving in.

    Adesina Tiamiyu, General Manager of Lagos State Emergency Agency (LASEMA) in a statement sent to The Nation, said the building suffered a partial collapse at the backside.

    “Investigation carried out by the LASEMA Response Team at the scene of incident revealed that a distress storey building suffered partial collapse at the backside” he said.

    “Two persons(female adult Toyin Ogundimu 35yrs and a young girl Sherifat Olalere 11yrs lost their lives to the incident and one male adult (Mustapher Salaudeen) was rescued and treated at the incident by the ambulance crew”.

  • Lagos seeks end to building collapse

    The Lagos State government has stressed the need for material testing as a way to achieve the vision of zero-building collapse in the state.

    Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Prince Rotimi Ogunleye said the vision must be concertedly and meticulously pursued by government and the building professionals with strict adherence to guiding rules, regulations and professional conduct.

    Ogunleye spoke during an inspection tour to the State Materials Testing Laboratory (LSMTL) at Ojodu.

    He said additional responsibility of regulating and certifying the practices of privately-owned testing laboratories added to the mandates of the LSMTL should spur the agency to live above board.

    He said: “This agency is one of the core agencies of the ministry and its role is vital. The incidences of building collapse send a negative signal to government and this explains why the government has been doing everything within its ability to reduce the incidences to barest minimum if not totally eradicate it.

    “Having inspected the various facilities here, I am convinced that if we do the right thing, this agency would perform its role diligently and effectively. We cannot afford to be lackadaisical; we must reach our peak to drive the built sector forward and ensure zero tolerance to building collapse.”

    LSMTL Acting General Manager Olalekan Ajani promised that the officials of the agency will continue to discharge their duties diligently and with integrity, noting that the recruitment of additional professionals – engineers, geologists and builders – are good impetus for the manpower capacity of the agency.

    “We are working on capacity building, this we do through retraining of our staff by organising trainings and conferences regularly so that we can key into the vision of the state government. We reiterate the need for our staff to demonstrate diligence, honesty, loyalty and integrity in the discharge of their duties”.

     

  • High hope as govt tackles building collapse

    High hope as govt tackles building collapse

    Can this year be devoid of building collapse? Yes, says the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA). “It’s  a tall order, ” others say. However, while some stakeholders and experts agree with the agency, they, nonetheless, insist that certain measures have to be put in place to attain this feat. MUYIWA LUCAS examines the impact of this agency in the built environment. 

    NO fewer than 81 buildings collapsed in the last five years across the country, with Lagos State accounting for most of the incidents, according to the Building Collapse and Prevention Guild (BCPG).

    The list includes a three-storey at 24, Daddy Aladja Street, Oke Arin on Lagos Island, which collapsed on May 29, 2017 during renovation. On July 22, 2017, another building went down at 7, Saidu Okeleji Street, Meiran in Agbado Oke -Odo Local Council Development Area (LCDA). On July 25, a building at No 3, Massey Street, Lagos Island, collapsed in the morning, during a rainstorm. The structure was initially planned for a three-storey before another floor was added to it.  Another three-storey  crashed at Saka Oloro Street, Ilufe Road, Alaba International Market, Ojoo on August 28, 2017.

    Other notable incidents are the September 12, 2014, Synagogue Church guesthouse in the Ikotun-Egbe area of the state, and the March 8, 2016 collapse of a five-storey at the end of Kushenla road in Ikate Elegushi, Lekki, belonging to Lekki Gardens.

    Indeed, building collapse has remained worrisome to many stakeholders and the government. This is mainly because of the lives lost during such incidents, the financial setback as well as the psychological impact on the citizenry.

    This is why states, especially Lagos, have provided guidelines on land use designation to guarantee orderliness in development. It is believed in some quarters that the Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development‘s (MPP&UD’s) response to requests for planning information ensures that the public is adequately informed on land use zoning, permissible use, plot size, building coverage and height, setback, airspace and parking requirements, among  others, for potential developments.

    Although there were some incidents in the state last year, stakeholders agreed that they were not as significant as the preceding years. BCPG immediate past President, and first Vice President, Nigerian Institute of Building (NIOB), Mr. Kunle Awobodu, explained that the reduction could be traced to some steps taken by the government, through the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA). One of such, he said, was the recruitment of 395 construction professionals, mostly young graduates, to improve on the monitoring capacity of LABSCA.

    Through this agency, the government intends to transform the building and construction industry by enhancing skills, promoting professionalism as well as improving design and construction capabilities, reducing building collapse to zero and, most importantly, achieving safe, secure and habitable buildings in the state.

    Managing Director, Tavote Nigeria, a design, construction and maintenance firm, Mr. Joseph Muagba, expressed confidence that given the drive in LASBCA, building collapse would soon be reduced drastically, if not eliminated. He explained that unlike in the past where the industry battled with structural integrity issues, drawings that pass approval test were now adequately vetted by the agency to ensure that they were of standard. The agency’s officials, he said, are strict with compliance to government’s regulations.

    “No doubt they (LASBCA) have added value as an institution. They have also simplified the process of getting approvals and enforcement of standards. They have recruited and trained a lot of people to carrying out enforcement and compliance. They are courteous and dedicated people.  However, sometimes, there are unnecessary interference from the Ministry of Environment as their responsibilities are duplicated,” Muagba, an engineer, told The Nation.

    Although he revealed that working with the agency initially was not ‘cordial,’ a development he blamed on resistance to change, for him, the birth of the agency is  welcome, as it has made engineers more relevant in the built environment than they used to be.

    Muagba explained that though it is not yet uhuru, LABSCA was the government’s response to the lawlessness in the private construction industry and other critical happenings which needed to be standardised. “LASBCA’s coming is gradually standardising the building industry in Lagos state. For instance, one of the rules now is that apart from having an approved drawing and project board on site, an engineer must be present on site. Additionally, the engineer’s visit to the construction site is to ensure compliance at every stage and a certificate of habitation is issued on completion before the house is certified for occupation. This has created jobs for engineers and professionals in the industry, as well as ensuring standards and integrity of a building,” he explained.

    Curbing the past

    While new buildings are easy to monitor and enforce compliance on during construction, worrisome is the state of old structures which were built pre-LASBCA. Awobodu warned that barring any shoring or stability mechanism, sub-standard buildings constructed in the past would eventually fail, leading to collapse.

    LASBCA General Manager, Mr. Lekan Shodeinde, explained that the agency was  aware of this threat. This, he said, was why the regulator embarked on a cleansing of old buildings across the state, last August. By September, after due notice to distressed property owners, the agency embarked on the demolition of buildings prone to collapse on the Lagos Island. In that exercise, 57 buildings out of the 114 identified, were removed in the first phase, following the approval of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode.

    Explaining the process leading to demolition, Shodeinde said before his agency demolish any building, the owner is required to conduct a “Non-Defective Test”, within three weeks and the result sent to the agency. Non- compliance with this will be deemed to mean that the building is distressed. The LASBCA boss explained that the choice of starting the demolition on the Lagos Island was premised on the preponderance of more distressed structures already identified in the area. He regretted that owners of such buildings had ignored advice by the government to remove the structures themselves, necessitating the agency’s proactive steps to avoid a disaster, which may result if the buildings fall off by themselves.

    Commenting on the cost implication of the demolition and the ownership of the land after such exercise, Shodeinde explained that the land still remains the property of the owner. The property owner, he said, is, however, required to pay the state government the cost of demolition, which will be communicated to the property owner in writing.

    “We are rendering a service to the property owner and not to confiscate the land because the building has not collapsed. We just remove the structure and communicate the cost to you, if you refund the cost to the government within 90 days the land is still yours; but if after 90 days of demanding the refund of money and there is none, or we do not get a correspondence from the land owner, the land then stands forfeited to the government,” Shodeinde explained.

    Solution vs Prevention

    Awobodu, though supports the exercise, says the solutions to building collapse should be a two-pronged approach. firstly, he said such should be derived from its causes. “If competent professionals are backed by the law to handle construction, from design through to post-construction stages, there would be less crisis in the building construction sphere of the country. The responsibility of appropriate designs should rest on qualified architects and engineers while that of the building production management should be borne by the professional resident builders,” Awobodu said.

    Importantly, he explained that the agency needs to focus more on what people are building, especially at the foundation stage because that is where most developers get their buildings wrong. Besides, he is convinced that the focus should be on prevention rather than finding solution after collapse because being proactive is better.

    Shodeinde agrees. He said his agency works  with other sister agencies/ministry, including the Lagos State Emergency Management Authority (LASEMA), Lagos State Ambulance Services, and Lagos State Physical Planning Permit Authority (LASPPPA) to make the buildings in the state secure, liveable and habitable. LASPPPA is the agency that issues building permit.

    Equally, he said as a form of its best practices regime, it expects owners and developers to conform to basic rules and regulations of the agency before the commencement of any new development/special project, amendment to existing buildings, renovation of buildings; before commencement of any forms of demolition, installation of renewable source of energy, maintenance that involves erection of scaffolding, renovation, rehabilitation, re-engineering improvement of any building , converting the use of any building, commencement of building construction, obtaining certificate of completion and fitness for habitation and verification and certification of General Contractors’ All Risk Insurance policy for buildings under construction as well as existing ones.

    Furthermore, the LASBCA boss explained that the agency has also put in place a whistle-blowing avenue, which he reckons will go a long way in checking unscrupulous acts in the industry. Whistle-blowing mechanism, he said, is a partnership to save lives and also an avenue where the agency advises people to expose what is not being done right in the industry. “Whistle-blowing is an avenue to give us whatever information on any structure, be it construction or reconstruction, that is structurally defective,” Shodeinde said. He urged the public to call the agency’s toll free lines to give information of deviation from approved permits and approvals and other atrocities on sites capable of jeopardising safety.

     Public reaction

    For Mrs. Adijat Adekunle, a 72-year-old fish seller on Lagos Island, the demolition of a three-storey at 152, Adeniji Adele Street, Lagos Island, belonging to the Aroba family is a welcome development, given the danger it posed to people in the area. Also, a student of Kwara State Polytechnic, Mr. Babatunde Afolabi, of 3, Ajanaku Street, Lagos Island,  commended the state government’s effort on the demolition. He told The Nation that the demolished building was “too weak and could pose a danger to the lives of the people on the street”.

    A retiree, who pleaded for anonymity because he resides on the same street housing the demolished building, said the structure, built in the 1990s, belonged to the Adeseye family. According to him, it was clear from the time of construction that the building had structural integrity issues. Hence, according to him, it was a welcome development that the building was pulled down by the government.

    At 54 Aroloya Street, Lagos Island, a 40-year-old barber and father of one, Mr. Bolaji Abdulahi, who has lived in the area for 15 years, explained that the house, belonging to the Olokodana family, had long been vacated by the tenants because of its state. He revealed that entreaties by the community to the children of the owner to either renovate the house or pull it down fell on deaf ears. So, the LASBCA initiative of pulling down the house was okay.

    But it has not been all praises for the agency. Some residents and perceived owners of demolished buildings on the Lagos Island were bitter with LASBCA for asking them to pay for the demolition. Although they refused to be identified with their buildings for what they termed “security reason”, they said the cost charged for the demolition was too high.

    A man in his late 50s, who identified himself as ‘Sesan’, however  described it as ridiculous when the government expected him to pay to reclaim his family land after losing a property. To him, it amounted to double loss. “How can they expect us to pay N250, 000 to get the land back?” he asked rhetorically. Findings by The Nation revealed that the payment for the demolition starts from N100, 000, depending on the type of building.

    According to Sesan, the charge was ridiculous, given that all LASBCA did was to use hammer to break the buildings in pieces and not pulling them down. “As you can see, the buildings they claim to have demolished are still standing; they only used hammer to break them in bits. So, is this what they expect us to pay such huge amount for? They are simply after revenue generating. If they had brought tractors to level the buildings and asked us to pay such amount, then it would have been a different ball game,” he lamented.

    Zero tolerance for collapse

    Shodeinde revealed that his team was working hard at ensuring that not a single building would collapse this year. This, he said, was why no stone was being left unturned to achieve this feat. The LASBCA boss told The Nation that the agency has begun combing every nook and cranny of the state to identify and  arrest structures that are either defective or may fail. The new strategy will include identifying intransigent and contraventions of building laws. The government, he said, would not hesitate to remove any illegal or unsafe structure to prevent loss of lives.

    Last week, the agency demolished 21 buildings erected illegally on the government’s land around Ogudu area of Lagos. The buildings, located on a swampy land, are not habitable and residents never got the government’s approval for such illegal development.

    “We will ensure that buildings in Lagos State are designed, constructed and maintained to high standards of safety to avoid loss of lives and properties through our building regulatory system. We aim to achieve zero percent building collapse, strict adherence to international best practices; we also intend to comb the entire state to remove distressed buildings after giving enough notices to owners and developers,” he assured.

    Re-invigoration

    Shodeinde is unfazed by the public reaction to his agency, especially after a structure has been removed. To him, such reaction is a confirmation that the agency is discharging its duties as prescribed by the law establishing it. Besides, he shares Muagba’s views that people are averse to change, not liking to leave their comfort zone even in the face of hazard to their existence.

    Rather, he said, he and his men were coming out stronger to enforce compliance with building laws. LASBCA, he further revealed, “is coming out heavily than before” on defaulters. For instance, he revealed that henceforth, defaulters, after prosecution, would have their names published in national newspapers, irrespective of their standing in the society. Also, where deaths of human beings are recorded in a collapsed building, the owner of such property will forfeit the land to government and also face prosecution.

    Shodeinde warned that the agency’s monitoring team and officers are combing the state for any on-going construction without appropriate permit; distressed/abandoned or soon-to-collapse building.

    More than ever, he said the game is up for defaulters who had taken delight in breaking the government’s seal on their premises as they will face the law.

    Contraventions

    Contraventions, according to LASBCA include development of property without an evidence of planning permit; development and use of structure without obtaining certificate of completion and fitness for habitation as prescribed by the law; use of non-professionals (quacks), and building without approval.

    Shodeinde advised that public to contact LASBCA at least seven days prior to commencement of construction at the site, adding that after two years of not commencing construction, any approval given will need to be resent for assessment and approval.

    Moving forward

    The agency, determined to achieve its dream of “no building collapse this year” says it has now become mandatory for owner/developer must apply to her for final inspection and issuance of a certificate of completion and fitness for habitation. This can be done via a simple written note to the technical team in charge of issuance of certificate and final stage inspection will be arranged between the engineers/architects (construction team) and the building control officers. Equally, developers must fully comply with development permit granted, Urban and Regional Planning and Development Law 2010, Building Codes and Building Regulations. The services of relevant professionals must also be engaged, including the usage of standard materials, and observance of health and safety prevention on site.

    Awobodu agreed with the position of the agency He added that nations with effective building codes hardly have cases of building collapse. The NIOB chief is convinced that if the National Building Code could be passed into law and abided by, the frequency of substandard construction would be very low.

    He wants more monitoring of sites by government officials, as this will ensure the conformity of building construction with the approved building plan.

    Stakeholders, like Awobodu and Muagba, are convinced that while the agency has done quite well in the delivery of its mandate, more can still be achieved with more public sensitisation.

     

  • Lagos trains staff to reduce building collapse

    The Lagos State Government has trained some of its workers  on how to reduce building collapse.

    The workers were trained in the areas of strengthening distressed buildings and the importance of proper foundation.

    The Acting General Manager of the State Materials Testing Laboratory (LSMTL), Olalekan Ajani, urged the workers to remain agents of change.

    One of the facilitators, Prof Funsho Falade, described strengthening of buildings as an improvement on weak structures.

    He stressed the need for proper investigation to maintaing the integrity of  existing structures.

     

  • Ambode to end building collapse

    Ambode to end building collapse

    The Lagos State Government has promised to bring an end to records of building collapse in the state.

    Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Abiola Anifowoshe, said this during the induction ceremony for recruited and deployed staffs to the Lagos State Materials Testing Labouratory (LSMTL) in Magodo, Lagos.

    He said the staff employment was sequel to the spate of collapsed buildings experienced in the state, arising from engagement of quacks in the construction of structures, use of substandard building materials by property developers, poor sensitisation on undertaking material testing in building and civil engineering construction.

    According to him, building collapse has led to colossal loss of innocent lives and properties across the state. “In order to prevent further happenings, the state Governor, approved the recruitment of 115 staff for LSMTL.

    They comprise of Civil engineers, Building officers, Chemical engineers, Geologists, Quantity surveyors, Architect, Driver, Mechanics and Cleaners.”

    He noted that the type of materials, equipments and machines that LSMTL has in their labouratory, with the newly added staff, would make the sky the limit. “I can assure you that the rate of collapse will be reduced to the bearest minimum and possibly no collapse at all.”

    He said the gesture was another proof of the several people oriented and sustainable programmes of the state governor, geared towards creating gainful employment for her citizens.

    The Permanent Secretary, Mrs Boladele Dapo-Thomas, represented by the Acting General Manager, Olalekan Ajani, said the three-day induction programme is to impact the new staffs with knowledge.

    She said the public service is all about service delivery to the people, noting that it is the government’s tool of implementing her policies, programmes and agenda.

    She told the new staffs  to acquaint themselves with the basic and general rules, regulations and principles guiding the conduct in or out of service.

    “Our business at LSMTL is to help curb the incidence of incessant collapse in building and civil engineering infrastructure, by testing materials used in the ‘building and construction industry’ for quality assurance. We are empowered by subsisting law to test existing buildings and civil engineering infrastructure to ascertain their structural integrity so as to prevent collapse.