Tag: building

  • Okorocha donates building to Imo NUJ

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha at the weekend opened and handed over a multi-million naira office Complex to the state Chapter of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ).

    The handing over was done during a media summit organised by the union.

    The governor, who handed the building over to the chairman, Innocent Igwe, said: “The disturbing impression in the country that every leader is bad or corrupt is not good for our nation. Such impression does not augur well for the country’s leaders, especially outside the shores of the country.

    “There are good leaders just like you have good journalists in the country, just as there are bad leaders and bad media practitioners. The problem is not in leadership or in journalism, but in certain overtures that need to be to tackled.

    “The theme of the summit, ”Media and Credible leadership”, is apt, though I would have preferred a theme like ”Media and Leadership or Credible Media and Credible Leadership” because credible media practice gives room for credible leadership. Most of the time, leadership remains the focus on everyone’s mind and everyone tends to look at leadership and not looking at the factors that make leadership.

    “We need to start presenting our leaders in the right light instead of presenting them as devils. Leaders that would make history are those leaders who make sacrifice. The strength of a leader lies in his ability to make sacrifices.”

  • Building a successful digital enterprise

    Afua Osei was the main speaker at a master class organised by Meltwater Entrepreneurial School of Technology (MEST), Lagos, an entrepreneurial training programme. She shared her knowledge on how to build a successful digital enterprise, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Top African women are harnessing the potential of digital tools to build entrepreneurial successes. One of them is the co-founder of She Leads Africa, Afua Osei.

    Through developing digital marketing, online commerce and startup incubators, women are providing other female entrepreneurs with skills, case studies and assistance to help their own businesses to flourish.

    Osei is a marketing consultant and visionary business coach to sustainable brands, social ventures and transformational entrepreneurs, helping clients to increase their online visibility and attract more traffic, leads and sales.

    She is a long-time entrepreneur and marketing maven. Three years ago, there were very few female technology entrepreneurs. Today, thanks in part to Osei and others, Lagos is home to dozens of female entrepreneurs who are using technology to advance their businesses and diversify their client bases.

    Osei’s journey to entrepreneurship has been interesting. She started by working in the Office of  the First Lady of the United States (US), Michelle Obama; working in other political campaigns, consulting for Mckinsey in Lagos and finally started SLA with a fellow McKinsey consultant, Yasmin Belo-Osagie.  She has become a powerful force in Nigeria’s budding entrepreneurship community. For the past three years, she has built her business as a digital magnet, winning clients through networking events. The secret to her success is building a powerful online platform that attracts ideal prospects and clients.

    At The Meltwater Entrepreneurial School of Technology (MEST), Lagos, a pan-African entrepreneurial training programme where she shared her knowledge on building a digital enterprise, Osei told the forum that there were tremendous opportunities for young entrepreneurs to explore within the digital space.

    She spoke on: How to build a digital tribe and transform it into a thriving business.

    According to her, the social media has given creative leaders and game changers the opportunity to express themselves, build a following, and earn through their passions.

    She said new entrants and established ones in digital business require skills to create sustainable relationships with their followers to make money.

    She said companies are ready to work with digital tribes and influencers as long as they are guaranteed more return on investment (RoI).

    According to her, SLA aims to facilitate networking and collaboration and to galvanise and support female-focused businesses.

    The enterprise, according to her, has served women across multiple industries, through seminars, workshops, and one-on-one mentoring, all in a bid to strengthen their business acumen.

  • 10 arraigned for allegedly damaging FRSC vehicles, building

    The police in Jos yesterday arraigned 10 men at an Upper Area Court, Kabong in Jos North Local Government of Plateau State, for allegedly destroying a building and vehicles of the Federal Road Safety Corps. (FRSC)

    They are Abbas Sharanu, Saheed Lawal, Musa Jibrin, Mapi Musa, Bashir Ibrahim, Jethro Danas, Panam Hassan, Usman Umaru, Sanusi Sanusi and Auwal Abubakar, all of Bauchi Road, Jos.

    The defendants were charged with criminal conspiracy, disturbance of public peace, unlawful assembly and voluntarily causing grievous hurt.

    Police prosecutor Mr. E.A. Inegbenoise told the court that Bernard Tele of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) apprehended and brought the defendants to Nasarawa Gwom Police Station on February 26.

    He alleged that the defendants, armed with cutlasses, knives and jerry cans of fuel, destroyed a building and cars at the FRSC office on Bauchi Ring Road.

    The Magistrate, Mr. S.N. Dashe, admitted the defendants to bail at N50,000 each and a surety.

    He adjourned the matter till May 22 for hearing.

     

     

     

  • ‘Cement is less than 20% of building cost’

    ‘Cement is less than 20% of building cost’

    The high cost of cement remains a huge problem, which seems to have defied solution. Reason: the country’s cement production capacity outweighs its demand. “I wouldn’t want to go into that…there is an emotional part of it and we tend to be emotional,” says the Chief Executive Officer of AshakaCem Plc, Rabiu Umar, in an interview with reporters during a tour of the company in Gombe State. He speaks on other issues, including the task of keeping the company afloat and its corporate social responsibility cases. MUYIWA LUCAS was there.

    Many people think the price of cement is high, considering that Nigeria produces more of the product than it needs. What’s your take on this?

    I wouldn’t want to go into that. It is very controversial because there is an emotional part of it and the real part of it. And typically, we tend to be more emotional. I don’t want to go into details but it is not quite true that all our raw materials are locally sourced. You can find out how much cement is in Chad and Niger in dollar and make the comparison.

    The price of cement is usually blamed for the prohibitive cost of housing. To what extent will you say cement influences housing affordability?

    Cement is less than 20 per cent of the total cost of building construction. So, you may want to ask what is the correlation between cement and the cost of building. The global average is six per cent; this is a verifiable and scientific information. Depending on the building practices, for instance, not everyone uses hollow blocks, some use the formwork. That way, there is a lot of saving. So, there are a lot of building practices that help to bring down price but when you look at the price of blocks and cement, the global average is six per cent. In Nigeria, it may be seven per cent but I don’t think it is up to eight per cent. Typically, people think if the price of cement is half of what it is today, it increases affordability or the number of people that can afford to build their own homes. In a sense, you can say yes, but it is only six per cent. The rest of the 94 per cent is in the finishing. You can build and finish the carcass of your building and you are just 30 per cent of the way including the concrete, beam and all. You find out that the cost of one door will probably build the walls. That is where most of the cost goes.

    How are government policies impacting on your business?

    I think there are two levels to it. Government policies in a sense have helped us to operate because without a framework, you cannot run. But is there room for improvement? Of course, there is. One of the key things that are really confusing is multiple taxation. There is the federal, state and local government tax regimes. And sometimes, when you stack up everything, it is a bit confusing to understand at what level it stops. Multiple taxation is one of the key drivers of business that every business owner talks about in the country. It also brings about uncertainty; you plan something you want to do this year and suddenly, something comes up that is not in your plan but can have an impact on your planning and result.

    What does the cement industry contribute to GDP?

    It depends on the level you take it from but between N18 and N20 billion a year, depends on the demand. It was a little higher the previous years but it dropped.

    How did the lull in the property market affect cement sales during recession?

    First of all, Nigeria went into recession and anybody who lives in Nigeria knows the impact. The cost of anything that has any correlation with foreign exchange has doubled. That is a reality. The income left after taking care of basic needs has gone down, and naturally, there is no way it won’t have an impact on certain sectors that are not immediate, like food. And then of course, the economic situation means that the market is not growing as fast as expected and I think that’s a publicly available information.

    How do you control your operations so that it doesn’t impact negatively on the environment?

    Cement business involves extracting things from the ground, but at the same time, we have a standard. LafargeHolcim has the largest building materials business in the world. Our policy is that if a country we are operating in has a lower operating standard than the one set by the company, then our company standard becomes what we use, and vice versa. So at any point in time, we make sure we are well within the standard that each location has. We have a very high standard; there are different regulatory agencies that we work with- the Ministry of the Environment, National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) and several others. The key concern here is the dust emissions and when it comes to coal, there is the acidity issue. And of course, before you even get licence to operate there must be an environmental management plan in place.  But beyond that we make sure we have an improvement plan. For instance, a few years ago, you know you are approaching AshakaCem when you find dusts on vehicles along the way, but today, that is not the case. It has reduced and we have the number to show for it. We hosted the former minister of environment sometimes ago to see what we are doing. Of course, there is always room for improvement but the most important thing is to ensure that the dust emission is lower than the limits set by the environmental plan.

    Lafarge has some affordable housing interventions in the Southern part of the country. What similar initiative do you have in the north?

    It is a national programme, not specific to any region. We are in the process of developing one in this region. Affordable housing comes in different shapes and forms. For instance, you may want to build houses in large scale. So, there is affordable housing and there is mass housing. So mass housing may not be the bottom of the pyramid but it allows more people to really have access to housing. And how does it work? You’re building this same structure in a thousand places and instead of using blocks you can use what we call the form work which is one of the things we are working on. We have done one in Ogun State, and we are taking people from the north to see how it works because the idea is to copy the model and ensure we can do it quickly and in a cost-efficient way.

    How are you coping with competition in the industry?

    The main thing we do is to focus on the customer and make sure we give them what they want. At the end of the day, cement goes everywhere. In reality, there is more than the demand but we are focused on making sure that our product does what it says it does. It is not about the technical aspect because at the end of the day, the customer can measure what he got from the product. Our focus is on making sure we are close to the customer and that we are giving him what he really needs. For instance, a blockmaker wants to work quickly and in as little time as possible, take the block and reuse the same wooden palette. So today, we have a particular product designed for that, it is called Superset; it is the fastest setting cement in the country and it means that segment will have preference. If you meet the big contractors, their needs are different from the regular trader who buys cement and resells. So, what we try to do is make sure we work with them from the beginning of a project to know what their needs are and I think that has worked for us thus far.

    How were you able to continue running your business at the height of Boko Haram hostilities in the North East?

    On November 4, 2014, our plant was attacked by the insurgents. Obviously, they were trying to find explosives. Exactly one month after that, there was another attack. Of course the default thinking was for the company to shut down during that period until things calmed down, but the management of LafargeHolcim took a decision to keep it open because as you may know, stopping and starting an operation of this magnitude is not really a day’s job. We have staff of 700 people working here and we live in a place that is more or less like an island. So, even if we shut down the operations, the staff are still here; you can’t have 700 people suddenly pack their bags to go somewhere.  Therefore, a decision was reached at a significant financial expense to keep the plant running and I think it was the right decision. It has shown that we have the resilience when it comes to keeping our operations running.

    Looking at the post-insurgent era, how are you contributing to the redevelopment of the Northeast region?

    To start with, we make cement and most of the destructions in the area were civil in nature- if you take out the psychological and socio-economic aspects. So, naturally, we are contributing in that regard. If you remember, there were more than two million people who were displaced by the insurgency and by virtue of keeping this operation running, we are helping to make sure there is enough economic activity in the area. Like I said, there are 700 people working here directly and probably another 2,000 people who do supply and other things. The average household in this part of the country is 10; so you can imagine what the company has done. A more direct approach is helping the communities acquire skills that can be useful in terms of social services and healthcare as well as education.

    In specific terms, how have you impacted on this community?

    We have an artisanship scheme, for example, that has intakes from the communities around here, and it is strictly created for them. Graduates of this scheme go on to set up their businesses. If you are a carpenter or a mason, we train you and you get the tools of the trade and can go into the community to start. At the same time, we absorb some of them into our firm. For instance, the second most senior person here on the industrial side, after the plant manager, is an indigene of Bajoga, (our host local government), who came through the artisanship programme- we took him to South Africa and also our sister plant in Calabar, Cross-River state, as the second most senior person there.  Let me clarify that we look at our contribution from the perspective of our operations rather than direct interventions. We have built classrooms, boreholes and a lot of things but we call those “business as usual” because they are basic things that we do. Building classrooms doesn’t mean that education will happen, so we do more sustainable activities in that regard.

    How else do you give back to the community?

    Giving back to the community comes in different forms and sizes. For instance, the focus we have as a company worldwide is healthcare, youth empowerment and education. These are things that everywhere you go in the LafargeHolcim world, though the style of implementation may differ, but these are the three core things. When it comes to healthcare, for instance, I can say directly, today on a daily basis we have a clinic that treats over 200 people from this community, every single day. Both consultation and drugs are free; it is one of the things we believe is important. In terms of youth empowerment and employment, we have in excess of 2,000 graduates since the beginning of the artisanship programme and every year, we keep taking them and we pay them for the two years that they are here on the programme. Over 90 per cent of the beneficiaries are of northern stock- 70 per cent are from the Northeast region. Gombe state indigenes account for 56 per cent of our staff strength, while most of the others are from communities around us. And when you look at education, we have two schools right inside AshakaCem premises and they have over 1000 students and 60 per cent of them are from the community and they don’t pay school fees. I think also beyond how much money we give the youths, there are also other exchange programmes that we have. A Polytechnic is about to start at Bajoga, the reason for citing the school there is because AshakaCem exists here. Polytechnics produce hands-on people, the plan is that we will partner with the school to do a lot of exchange programmes.

    Sometime last year, you singed MoU with some communities. How far have you gone with the implementation of that agreement?

    The implementation is ongoing. We ran into some misunderstanding. Everywhere you operate a mining activity, you must have a community development agreement which defines the basics of what you must do; but you don’t limit yourself to only what is in the agreement. We ran into some hitches but the agreement is being implemented while we are trying to do more. It is not everything we do that is in black and white. The medical thing I talked about earlier is not part of the plan but we do it. The MoU contains a five-year programme, but what we try to do is make sure that whatever we want to do within a year, we do it before the year runs out so that the community can start enjoying the benefit.

    This community is largely agrarian. Do you have plans to empower the community through farming as some sort of CSR?

    Absolutely! This is one project that we are doing; it is at the starting phase. We are starting an agricultural programme called Agri-ecology; it is all about mixed breeding- where one crop fights the pest of the other, for instance, leading to the creation of a high yield. It is also about taking the ecology of agric process back to its natural way. So, we are going to roll that out to empower our communities and help increase their yield by up to 30 or 40 per cent. It means they can generate more revenue from one piece of land. The other side of it is that it will help them to organise better distribution in terms of what they get from the produce. There has always been the issue of farmers not getting value for their labour, so, we are doing this to help them to get more value from their farming activities and turn it to an all year round thing. We are starting the pilot scheme this year with tomatoes because we hope to start with cash crops. The farmers won’t have to just wait for the rain. That’s what we are working on. The second part of  this scheme is linked to how we help control our carbon dioxide (CO2) emission. The Federal Government tries to encourage rice farming everywhere, so the rice husk, a by-product of rice processing can be used in our kiln. We call it geo-cycle. The idea is to take corn cubs and the rice husks to produce clean energy and at the same time clean the environment. The producer doesn’t go to the farm to produce rice husks or corn cubs but at the end of the day he makes more money in addition to what he makes from the produce because we buy it off him.

    What short term plans do you have to keep your customers in business?

    It goes back to what I said, it is basically the promise that the products will deliver. We get feedback from our consumers and work on that. That is what we do everyday; making sure they remain in business because that also helps us to remain in business.

    Five years from now where do you see Ashaka Cement Plc in terms of expansion?

    Where we see AshakaCem is as a more efficient business in the next five years and one of which is from the cost perspective. There is currently a project ongoing, we are building a power plant to be able to generate our own electricity. Today, we are relying on generators, and as you know, the cost of fuel whether low pour fuel oil (LPFO) or diesel is very high and has a high correlation to foreign exchange. We are building an N11billion, 16-megawatt coal-fired power plant to cater for our needs. That is one of the biggest plan that we have in terms of being able to reduce our costs because one of the biggest cost in cement production is the cost of energy. Inside the kiln, we have temperature running up to 1,400 degrees which is heat temperature required to melt steel. You can imagine the kind of heat we are talking about here and to generate that kind of heat, we need fuel.  The second is to unlock some of the existing potential in terms of capacity, over the years, you lose some efficiency and we are trying to gain back that efficiency. The other is, depending on how things go, we intend to increase the capacity of the plant by building new capacity.

  • ERGP: Building competitive economy through focused laboratories strategy

    ERGP: Building competitive economy through focused laboratories strategy

    In this analysis, Cecilia Ologunagba of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) writes that the Federal Government is adopting the Focus Laboratories option to stimulate investors’ interest in power, agriculture and manufacturing to drive its Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).

    The medium term Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) 2017 to 2020, inaugurated by President Muhammadu Buhari to address the country’s economic challenges, will be one year old in April.

    Integral to the ERGP is an ambitious roadmap to return the economy to the path of growth and achieve seven per cent growth rate by 2020.

    The driver of the ERGP is the Focus Laboratories on power, agriculture and manufacturing recently inaugurated by the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. The laboratories have been designed to fast track economic growth.

    According to Prof. Osinbajo, the Focus Laboratories would further boost economic growth and ensure continuity in Nigeria’s determination to build a competitive economy.

    The vice president said: “The labs will operate by bringing together all private and public sector officials to achieve the ERGP’s objective of reaching seven per cent economic growth by 2020.

    “The Focus Labs are being conducted in three selected areas to accelerate investment and job creation.

    “These specific areas are agriculture and transport, manufacturing and processing and finally power and gas sector.”

    Osinbajo explained that the laboratory groups were meant to bring private/public sector participants and potential investors together to think through the implementation of the specific areas of focus.

    “We believe that working together as a group, we will be able to achieve these specific objectives that have been set out for us,” he said.

    Budget & National Planning Minister Udoma Udo Udoma said the government would improve power generation and its operational capacity to 10 gigawatts by 2020.

    But two years to the deadline, the Federal Government has only succeeded in generating four gigawatts.

    The former senator has however expressed optimistic that the laboratories will eliminate the bottlenecks that hinder private sector investment in key sectors of the economy.

    He listed the sectors critical to economic growth as agriculture, manufacturing and power.

    The minister said the removal of the bottlenecks has become imperative because $245.1 billion would be required to implement the ERGP, out of which $195.98 billion would be sourced from private sector and $49.15 billion dollars from the public sector.

    Udoma said the three main objectives of the initiative were to create new investment opportunities for critical projects, job creation and resolution of complex inter-agency problems that inhibited private sector investment.

    In continuation of the executive/legislative engagement on critical plans and activities of the ministry, Udoma at the National Assembly on February 21 to brief a joint session of its leadership on the economic recovery focus laboratories.

    The minister explained that they were aimed at driving the critical sectors of the economy to achieve the strategic objectives of the ERGP.

    The objectives are restoring economic growth, investing in the people and building a globally competitive economy.

    Udoma said the ministry established the labs because of government’s determination to actualise the strategic objectives of the major enabling sectors of the ERGP.

    According to him, they would unlock investment potentials stalled due to bureaucratic bottlenecks and in the process, fast track the projects to enable investors to mobilise their investments.

    The labs therefore, he said, are aimed at fast-tracking the attainment of the set objectives and to deliver quick and fast results to the citizens.

    He said this would be achieved by identifying actionable projects and removing roadblocks that had been impeding their implementation.

    Udoma, however, told the legislators that since government alone could not shoulder the provision of critical infrastructure and provide investment capital needed to drive the process, it decided to create an enabling environment.

    The minister said: “It has decided to not partner with the private sector for investment funds, but also make the environment attractive to investors.

    “To achieve its goal, the government must target its investment drive significantly at investors with the capacity to boost the economy and create jobs for Nigerians.

    “That is why it is embarking on the labs to fashion out a strategic direction and then conduct a mass crowd sourcing of ideas to mobilise resources into the focused areas.”

    The minister said that labs would also identify catalytic Entry Point Projects (EPPs) that would mobilise private investment projects to spearhead investment and job creation in the specific sectors.

    The labs are being executed in three phases: Pre-lab expected to take place from January 15 to March 4; Main lab, from March 5 to April 15 and Post lab, April 15 to May 13.

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu who represented Senate President Bukola Saraki at the session, commended government’s move at ensuring the implementation of the plan, and that government had become serious about developing the economy.

    He urged Nigerians to stop de-marketing the country through unnecessary criticism and pessimism, making it difficult to find solutions to problems besetting the economy.

    He said Nigerians should put their acts together and think patriotically.

    Ekweremadu suggested that some structures of government should give way and allow funds to be put to proper and more beneficial use to the people.

    He called on the Federal Government to reinforce its security architecture and power infrastructure to ensure a conducive environment that would attract investors.

    House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara commended the executive for ensuring the objectives of the ERGP were realised.

    Dogara, however, urged the Federal Government to do something about the interest rate regime as Nigerians might be unable to effectively participate in the investment programme because of funding constraints.

    Dr Idris Jala, the Head of the Malaysian Performance Management Delivery Unit (PEMANDU) briefed the leadership of the National Assembly on the Malaysian experience.

    According to Jala, the Malaysian economic history has a lot of semblance with the Nigerian experience.

    He said at a point the Malaysian economy took a downward turn and he had to warn that unless there was a fundamental way of managing the economy, the country would go bankrupt.

    Dr. Jala recommended transformational leadership at all levels, which entailed taking actions that might be painful in the short-term but beneficial in the long-run to the people.

    He said that Malaysia also used the lab process with great success as a tool for the transformation of its economy.

    Nevertheless, analysts note that the level of commitment from the government and private sector would result to generating $24 billion worth of investment for the country from the labs.

  • 11 injured in building collapse

    •As LABCA commences building recertification

    Eleven persons yesterday sustained varying degrees of injury after a two-storey building collapsed in Lagos.

    The incident occurred around 3am at 1, Community Road, off Old Otta in Alagbado.

    It was gathered that the fence of the building caved in on Friday night after it rained heavily.

    According to residents, the structure was defective and only had occupants at the topmost floor.

    It was gathered that those who sustained injuries were rushed the hospital before the arrival of emergency workers and 10 of them were discharged after receiving treatment.

    The last victim, it was learnt, was transferred to the General Hospital after doctors recommended scans, advance observations.

    According to the General Manager, Lagos State Building Control Agency (LABCA), Lekan Sodeinde, the structure was substandard and the owners did not get permit to erect it.

    He stated that the building was also erected on a land that had an existing structure.

    Sodeinde said: “The building is an existing structure, it was not under construction. Obviously, the owner did not build well because the structure was defective.

    “From our findings in the neighbourhood, the owner is not someone that is known to always abide by the law. The structure was built at the back of another existing building and it appears substandard materials were used for it. It collapsed completely. That building had no approval.

    “The debris of the building showed that it was weak. People need to understand that building collapse can only be avoided during construction and that is by doing the right things.

    “When you have constructed and you see depreciation in the strength of the building, you need to work on repair. I advise Lagosians to be mindful of where they live. The rain will definitely weaken any poorly constructed structure.

    “The state government is working to ensure that all buildings are recertified. Owners of buildings are expected to come forward for the evaluation of their structures and issuance of certificates.

    “Any building that is considered unsafe for habitation would not be issued the certificate and would be tested to ascertain the extent of work that is needed to be done on it or whether it would be pulled down.

    “Even if you are a tenant and you are living in a building that you are not sure of, you can come to us and we will take it up from there. We have started the revaluation of buildings. We will ensure that the recertification reaches all parts of the state.”

  • Dangote gives N1.2b building to Bayero varsity

    Dangote gives N1.2b building to Bayero varsity

    Nigeria’s business magnate Aliko Dangote has donated a N1.2 billion building to the business school in Bayero University, Kano (BUK).

    The building will be handed over to the university next month.

    Dangote is also building a similar business school in the University of Ibadan.

    The business schools, according to president of Dangote Group, is part of efforts to build entrepreneurship in Nigerians through education at the highest level.

    He explained that the situation in Nigeria necessitates revisiting school curricula to reflect the new consciousness of entrepreneurship and manufacturing, and efforts to encourage the study of business, especially at the second level in the university.

    The building comprises auditoriums, lecture theatres, offices, classes, library, and complete electrical fittings and cooling system.

    Dean of Faculty of Dangote Business School Prof. Murtala Sagagi, said: “We wanted a business school but we couldn’t go ahead with the project because there was no befitting structure to accommodate the kind of dream we had. But when Dangote came in about five years ago, the university decided to have the business school.”

  • Town planning consultant calls for building audit in Lagos

    Town planning consultant calls for building audit in Lagos

    A town planning consultant, Mr Makinde Ogunleye, has called for a comprehensive auditing of all new and old buildings in Lagos State to curb the menace of incessant building collapse.

    Ogunleye, a former Chairman, Nigeria Institute of Town Planners (NITP), Lagos State Branch, made the call in an interview with news men on Friday in Lagos.

    He urged the state government to urgently embark on the building audit to enable it to take appropriate steps to avert the collapse of distressed buildings.

    According to him, majority of collapsed buildings in the state were dilapidated.

    “Audit of building is all about conducting an integrity test on a building, to ascertain the stability of the structure.

    “It will reveals the structural capacity of a building, giving the signs of dilapidation,” he said.

    Read Also: Lagos seals Badoo kingpin’s properties

    Ogunleye said that audit of all buildings in the state would not take more than three months to be completed, if the government could be proactive about it.

    “After the audit, an immediate removal of all identified non-remedial distressed buildings, as well as structures blocking access and drainage alignment, must follow,” he said.

    Ogunleye also advised the state government and residents of the state to develop maintenance culture of the buildings, saying that poor maintenance could lead to early collapse of buildings.

    “If Lagosians can ensure proper maintenance and servicing of their buildings, the issue of building collapse will be curtailed,” he said.

    NAN

  • Publisher donates building to Lagos primary school

    To complement Lagos State government in its efforts at infrastructure provision, the Publisher of Oriwu Sun community newspaper, Alhaji Monzor Olowosago, has built and equipped a 3-classroom block as donation to Estate Primary School, Ikorodu.

    While commissioning the ultra modern building last week, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode commended Olowosago for supporting the efforts of the Lagos State government to further improve the learning environment for pupils of its public schools across the state. The governor described the gesture as a laudable one that should be emulated by other people and organisations.

    Ambode, who was represented by his Special Adviser on Civic Engagements. Hon. Kehinde Joseph, explained that education is one of the most important sectors of the socio-econmic development of any society. He added that irrespective of the richness of a school curriculum, the environment for must also play a key role as it must be relatively conducive for effective learning to take place, which informed the policy of his administration towards educational development in the state.

    Speaking at the event which was witnessed by government officials, traditional rulers and other eminent personalities from within and outside the state, Olowosago said the project was divinely inspired at a time when he was thinking about giving back to the society from the blessing God has bestowed upon him and his media organisation over the years.

    “God inspired me to donate the building to this school. I saw a need in my environment and decided to meet that need to the benefit of the community. I have been thinking of how I can appreciate God for all that he has done for me. Then God put it in my mind to put smiles on the faces of these little children and their teachers and I decided to do just that. I am happy that they all appreciate my little gesture,” he said.

     

  • ‘Building cost control not fully optimised’

    Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS) President Mr. Obafemi Onashile has said building cost control has not been fully optimised in the country.

    He therefore wants a reform. Onashile spoke on the sidelines at the Dinner/Awards nite of the Lagos Branch of the NIQS.

    The president said in terms of procurement in the construction industry, a lot more needed be done.

    “We are talking of civil engineering like power construction, power installation, mainly engineering works, we need to do more. Our impact is still not fully felt in these areas,” Onashile said.

    He assured that in the build up to the Procurement Act, awaiting the President Muhammdadu Buhari’s accent, the institute would play a major role leading up to the procurement in the country.

    This, he further explained, would be achieved by rallying round and partnering other professionals in the industry to reform the industry.

    “Our industry is running in adversarial manner and it is not too good for the nation. When all the professions come together, then we can be more effective and function. For now, building cost control is not fully optimised. Quality control is becoming an issue in the country and its beyond just one profession,” Onashile said.

    The NIQS chief said the better cost control in procurement at the Federal Government level is a testimony to the effectiveness of the head of the procurement bureau also a qauntity surveyor.

    Similarly, the Chairman of Lagos chapter of NIQS, Mr. Bamidele Mafimidiwo, told reporters that quantity surveyors were better off with the Procurement Act, arguing that it would ensure probity.

    He said when quantity surveyors are in strategic positions in the construction industry, you not only get value for your work,  you will also be able to save more on your projects as wastage are cut off.

    He is happy that quantity surveyors are taking key roles in the industry and that the country will benefit more.

    The awards, Mafimidiwo said, is a programme that caps the institute’s activities for the year. We have done a lot of programmes this year. This year’s dinner, he explained, is unique because of the award introduced.

    In all, 17 persons, including Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, the first female president of NIQS, Mrs. Mercy Iyortyer, several private sector operators, among others, were given awards for their contributions to the industry.