Tag: building

  • Expert advises on building dampness

    Dampness in buildings is a common occurrence in most houses. This is caused by the build-up of excess water from internal moisture or an intrusion from outside.

    According to experts, dampness in building is one of the important issues to consider during construction because, if neglected, it will affect the building structure adversely and create an unhygienic condition for persons living in such buildings.

    The Manager,  Resource Team Company, a building solution providers, Serah Egbuna, said dampness could be caused by rain water on external walls and parapets; condensation of atmospheric moisture; wet areas of buildings, such as kitchens, bath rooms, and sub standard plumbing fittings.

    Other reasons include dampness from high ground water table, cracks through which rain water seeps inside, and seepage from leaking walls of bathroom and kitchen.

    Egbuna said the current traditional waterproofing methods were not enough to tackle severe dampness occurring due to these reasons.

    “You need a specialised treatment to arrest this dampness permanently. You need not break the wall plaster to reach to brick level to waterproof it. It is directly applied on damp internal wall by brush and is very easy to use. Due to quick drying technology, the job is done very quickly,” she said.

    Egbuna added that builders and others involved in the construction industry need not fret over wall or foundation cracks, ground water seepage, disrepair, dampness, lighting, roofing, substructure, walls, flooring or any defect in a building as her firm provides all types of solutions ranging from water proofing, coatings and paints, building repairs, performance flooring, sealants, tile fixing, concrete admixture, grouting and anchors, among many others.

  • New building code for energy use coming

    New building code for energy use coming

    The Federal Government is considering a new building code that will ensure energy conservation, the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola has said.

    Fashola who spoke at the 13th Distinguished Electrical and Electronics Engineers Annual Lecture (DEEEAL) in Lagos yesterday said the new code would promote usage of glass buildings to enable the use of day light, more windows and use of materials that will keep the building illuminated and cool.

    Fashola said the new building system becomes imperative because the nation’s power generation remained at the lowest ebb. Government’s decision on the new building code underscores the need for power consumers to adopt a more efficient ways of consumption, adding that his administration has formed another building code as a new guideline for electrical and construction engineers in the country.

    Fashola stated that the government is working on energy mix that will enable the country tap electricity from different sources because dependence on gas holds the country to ransom.

    He said: “Government will access any available source of energy in order to achieve not only affordable energy but also national energy security so that we are not dependent on one source of fuel. Our vulnerability to gas has been responsible for the developments we see today, so one of the things that the energy mix will do is not just taking power plants closer to fuel source but also help us to achieve national energy security.

  • We are building capacity for improvement, says Ibom Power MD

    We are building capacity for improvement, says Ibom Power MD

    The management of Ibom Power Company (IPC) is implementing a Capacity Building Programme (CBP). This programme was created as part of the company’s policy on business continuity and performance enhancement.

    Speaking on the development, the Managing Director of Ibom Power, Dr. Victor Udo said “the CBP is a learning platform to train and develop participants’ competency in electric power business operations. The programme is limited to a maximum of 40 participants at any given time”.

    “The training programme includes internship, apprenticeship, industrial training for Polytechnic and University students along with members of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) posted to IPC” he said.

    The MD said that “since July 2014 when the programme commenced, the CBP initiative has been beneficial to candidates from across the three (3) Senatorial Districts in AkwaIbom State”.

    According to the power Boss, “thus far, at least 64 individuals have been involved in CBP. When there are openings for employment in the company, some CBP candidates are considered based on their performance”.

    Speaking further he added that “while IPC encourages staff that can be pulled by other plants to remain with the company, the capacity building programme serves as a ‘pipeline’ to train potential replacements for any employee who chooses to take an appointment somewhere else”.

    He concluded by saying “over the years, staff of Ibom power have been recruited by other power companies in Nigeria and the Middle East. With the CBP and our succession plan, we will always have people ready to step-in as the need arises”.

     

  • One dead as fire razes building

    A guard, Suleiman Aliyu, 28, was on Saturday burnt to death in Lagos.

    It was learnt that the fire which started around 1:30pm in the guard’s quarters, at 15, Obiwunmi Street, off Fola Agoro, in Shomolu was caused by petrol stored in the place.

    The Nation gathered that the fire spread from the security house to the 12 self-contained apartments in the premises.

    It took the combined efforts of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), the Fire Service and the police to contain the fire.

    LASEMA General Manager Michael Akindele said kegs of petrol were stored in the deceased’s apartment which came in contact with other highly combustible items.

    He said Aliyu’s remains had been handed over to his family for burial.

    Akindele advised Lagosians to desist from storing petroleum products and other inflammable materials at home.

  • Building a world class varsity (II)

    As the quest for “world class” gradually becomes the norm, global ranking of universities have equally become very popular and controversial at the same time. Institutions that do not feature in these rankings often pick holes in them despite the criteria they set.  These rankings include: Times Higher Education (THE) Ranking, Academic Ranking of World Universities, Webometrics Ranking, Professional Ranking of World Universities, Newsweek Ranking, and Others.

    Universities’ punch holes in them because it places their graduates in disadvantaged positions in the labour market. Preoccupations about university rankings thus reflect the general recognition that economic growth and global competitiveness are increasingly driven by knowledge and that universities play a key role in that context.

    It is against this backdrop that Mr. Bola Akingbade advised the management of Redeemer’s University to leverage their brand name for desired purposes. Facilitating this will include the following elements: Source of Authority – e.g. roots and origins, recorded achievements and reputation. Functional benefit delivery potential which translates to verifiable evidence of special features that can deliver special experiences is necessary. Also critical is the emotional benefit delivery potential which combines apt description of exactly how the offering will bring about appropriate feelings.

    To make a time tested impact, the brand character and attitude must be clearly defined. This depicts the personality of the brand – particularly the aspect that speaks to the aspirations of the target “customer” (potential undergraduates). The brand values encompass the value associations and specific platform from which the brand can speak authoritatively and the brand essence – a “one-word” summation of what it stands for must be clearly defined.

    He also emphasised that “the need for insightful knowledge of the ‘drivers of choice’ for target customers cannot be overemphasised. The success or otherwise of brand management strongly depends on deep customer knowledge and understanding. This is crucially necessary for the necessary establishment of the value proposition that should represent a perfect fit between the brand and the target customer.”

    Toward this end, a “brand value proposition” is an undertaken by the brand to meet the needs of target customers under terms that are specific and unambiguous. In the case of a university with world class aspirations, the value proposition will spell out in short, concise but clear terms, what the target customers (e.g. students), are to expect if they choose to attend the university for their tertiary education. The value proposition should serve to reinforce target customer resolve to choose the university, over and above all else.

    Mr. Rufai Ladipo, the chief executive officer, Agile Communication, Lagos – who also contributed to the lecture – also harped on some salient requirements that are fundamental in attaining world class status. Brand building – he noted – is the deliberate and skillful application of effort to create a desired perception in someone else’s mind. A potential university brand must therefore be able to attract the necessary quantity and quality of students while still operating the traditional university style. This means “branding the students or in-person experience and differentiating it from competing institutions.”

    In order to achieve this, the branding of the university must transcend the physical campus. As more courses are delivered electronically some of the branding factors that set the school apart such a gorgeous campus, hip environment and others won’t matter anymore, especially to the student living miles away.

    A potential world class varsity should therefore create one unified message based on what makes the institution different; who you are and what you do. What distinct benefit(s) does your school deliver? “Define what you want to stand for, and embrace and preserve both the tangible and intangible elements that make your brand unique. Also note that aside from your proposition is the use of logos, icons etc that also says a lot about your identity, and which can stand alone, even without reference to the name.”

    The route to achieve this is to focus on Public Relations – not advertising – and manage perception that creates a sense of belonging through engagement. Staff, faculty, administrators and students all play a key role in delivering an institution’s brand promise. So, engagement through the institution’s website and social media platforms are necessary, but should be carefully managed by experts.

    Another requirement, according to Ladipo is to “build a brand promise based on academic offerings, student experience, or an institution’s prestige. Develop brand strategies that reflect the emotional and psychological dynamics (alumni giving, staff culture, student experience, recruitment efforts, instructor reputation, ranking, faculty engagement, and community relations) of an education institution as a whole. These dynamics will influence and shape the perception of your brand in the market.”

    Next is to create a brand experience through updated curriculum. Curricula must be relevant in today’s global marketplace through new academic subjects. Institutions must also be aware of the growing population of non-traditional students and aging student population so as to accommodate more online and distant learning as well as continue to offer broader spectrum of student needs. Doing so will strengthen the brand’s position in “the crowded market place.”

    Successful brands know the importance of emotions in the art of connection. A potential world class varsity will therefore build an emotional brand experience that creates loyalty. “If you build it they will come. If the emotional connection between your brand and your prospect is strong, the brand experience will bring active/continued referrals as well as increased profitability to your school.

    Loyalty means higher retention rates as well as reduced marketing costs. Create loyalty by understanding your market segments as well as offering convenient locations/hours, having an employer influence (corporate alliance), pricing, timing, or flexibility with schedules. For example, university of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School recently launched a new brand platform based on the idea that Wharton knowledge fuels action. What a great idea, this will definitely build brand loyalty.”

    Powerful brands understand these matrixes because they know it increases market share and loyalty. The power of brand lies in the minds of students’ perception: what they have learned, heard, felt or seen as a result of their experience over time. Ultimately these students determine what the brand means. The varsity should carry the internal stake holders along: make sure they internalise the brand as well as the vision of the school via solid internal communication as well as providing customised physical collaterals such as T-shirts, note books, bags and other collaterals with the school’s identity.

    As the global environment for tertiary education expands—encompassing not only the traditional student exchanges and scholarly sojourns but also such issues as cross-border investments and market-type competition among institutions—stakeholders must re-evaluate their priorities and expectations. Historically, tertiary education institutions were cultural landmarks for their home nations. They educated their own students, trained their own academic staffs, and stored the cultural and local histories of their regions.

    Their graduates are ambassadors for the university. They are innovative leaders who help people and communities flourish. Some are known for being strong communicators, ethical thinkers and creative problem-solvers with a deep commitment to sustainability and social justice. They are knowledgeable in their disciplines and eager for collaboration and continuous learning. The creative ones among them integrate professional skills with global citizenship, entrepreneurial energy and intellectual curiosity.

    But international pressures, largely the result of global flows of tertiary education resources -funding, ideas, students, and staff – have forced institutions to re-examine their missions. Moreover, these pressures have forced governments – by far the largest funding sources for tertiary education – to re-examine their commitments to and expectations from their tertiary education institutions. One prominent outcome of these has been the rise in league tables and rankings of various sorts and, subsequently, the growing desire to compete for a place at the top of a global hierarchy of tertiary education.

    So the lecture organised by Redeemer’s University, and the highly qualified resource persons that delivered them, was quite apt; foreign varsities have known this “secret” for years. This is the major reason we have hundreds of thousands of Nigerian students studying in foreign varsities. They get what local varsities are not providing.  Will our varsities rise to the occasion in an aggressive and competitive world? Time will tell.

  • Slain building merchant’s family cries out for justice

    Slain building merchant’s family cries out for justice

    The Elegushi family of Lagos has cried out for justice over the death of its son, Yusuf.

    Yusuf Elegushi, a University of Lagos (UNILAG) Business Administration graduate was shot dead last Thursday by suspected hoodlums.

    He was chairman of Building Materials Suppliers, Alaguntan Village chapter in Ajah, Lagos.

    His father, Chief Muritala Adedoyin Elegushi, is urging Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and Police Commissioner Fatai Owoseni to bring the killers to justice.

    He said his son was hit in the chest by a bullet while trying to rescue a victim that was earlier shot.

    Elegushi said the assailants escaped, adding that his son was rushed to the hospital where he was confirmed dead.

    According to him, there was a disagreement between the hoodlums and a man two days earlier over N3,000 and the leader of the hoodlums was injured in the jaw.

    Elegushi said the gang mobilised to revenge and his son was killed.

    He said the incident was reported at Ogombo Police Station and three of the suspects were arrested, adding that the matter has been transferred to the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) at Panti, Yaba.

    Elegushi, who described his son as quiet and easygoing, said the late father of two had planned to mark his 26th birthday next month.

    He said the family had petitioned the governor and Owoseni to arrest and prosecute the suspected hoodlums’ leader.

    Elegushi said that was not the first time the gang would kill innocent people in the area, adding that such killings were swept under the carpet.

    He accused the suspected hoodlums of killing people at Alaguntan Village, Ikota, Olukotun, Gedegede, Moba, Isakaba and Mabro Estate.

    Police spokesperson Dolapo Badmus, a Superintendent (SP), confirmed that the case has been transferred to the SCID for further investigation.

    The arrested persons, she said, are

  • Address human factor in building collapse, urges ATOPCON

    Address human factor in building collapse, urges ATOPCON

    The immediate past Lagos State Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Toyin Ayinde, has said the spate of building collapse in the country is a signal that quality is being compromised.

    Ayinde, who spoke at this year’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Association of Town Planning Consultants of Nigeria (ATOPCON), stated that aside the quantity of building materials, labour is also a vital aspect of quality.

    Ayinde was represented at the AGM by Mr. Moses Ogunleye.

    Ayinde, who noted that though  town planners, like other professionals in the build industry are facing challenges, said it was rather unfortunate that the industry is at the receiving end.

    “When incidents of building collapse still stare us in the face, it is a signal that quality is being sacrificed, but that really is the essence of ATOPCON, an association intended to foster quality consultancy services and healthy peer review,” he said.

    Ayinde, therefore, charged the experts and others to ensure that the level of awareness for quality must be raised if professionals were to remain relevant to the built environment.

    ATOPCON, he maintained, needs to enlighten professionals and other colleagues who might just see the association as another elitist movement designed to strangulate some people out of practice.

    Rather, the former commissioner said the association was seeking to bring together experienced professionals, who could learn from one another, and thus cause an improvement in service delivery.

    “There is no better time to convince more people to be committed to quality practice. There, indeed, lies our future. Sustainable systems have always survived on quality service, and ours should not be different. I therefore urge us to begin to think through the various challenges faced in the built environment and the construction industry, and to evolve viable solutions that will make us the pride of the society,”Ayinde said.

    Similarly, a Mass Communication lecturer at the University of Ilorin, Dr. Kadijat Kadiri-Bello, while delivering a lecture titled: “Rebranding town planning firms,” said there was the need for town planners to rebrand and take their place in the built environment.

    This, she cautioned, was not just about change in name, logo or colour, but also about professionals being open to adopting a consistent definition of branding, including evolving and sustaining transparency within their operations.

    ATOPCON’s immediate past Lagos chairman, Mr. Joseph Akande, said it had become imperative for the body to evolve new ways to deliver services. If imbibed, Akande said, it would lead to great improvements in the image and integrity of town planners before the general public, clients and professional colleagues.

    ATOPCON President, Mr. Olaide Afolabi emphasised that the aim of the association is to ensure the evolvement and nurturing of sustainable human settlement and cities.

    This, he explained, would be achieved if its members promote  urban and regional planning practice.

    “Our message to the Lagos State government is that it should  continue its efforts in the development of the city into a true mega city and ensure physical planning is used as an important and vital tool in guiding development plans, schemes and policies within the city.

    ‘’As is obtained in other climes, countries with sound, proactive physical planning and policies develop rapidly and sustainably.  Lagos cannot afford to be left out in creating an enduring liveable city and, as town planning consultants, we have to live up to the calling of our profession and its ethics,” Afolabi said.

  • Breaking News: Four dead, many trapped as building collapses in Lagos

    Four persons have been confirmed dead and many others feared trapped after a five storey-building collapsed at Lekki Phase one in Lagos on Tuesday morning.

    The incident occurred at Chisco bus stop, opposite Oando Gas Station.

    According to Director, Lagos State Fire Service, Rasaq Fadipe, five people have been rescued  alive, while search and rescue continues.

    More details soon.

  • Residents seek demolition of building

    Residents seek demolition of building

    •Landlord: it’s in good condition

    Is House 102 on Idewu Street in Ajegunle, Lagos safe for inhabitation?

    Some residents of the street believe that the two-storey building is not conducive to live in.

    Part of the building, it was gathered, collapsed in 2010 and it was marked for demolition by Lagos State Urban and Regional Planning officials.

    According to the residents, after the marking, the landlord, Mr Fatai Martins, removed the third floor of the building and ejected tenants on the ground floor.

    But, Martins denied that the house was marked for demolition.

    He told The Nation that he built the house in 1999 as a three-storey building.

    “In 2010, when a part of the building collapsed, some officials came but I was only told to renovate it and remove the third floor which I did. I removed it and made a solid gutter roof and fixed a pillar to the part that collapsed. They inspected what I did and since then nobody has come to me. I have not had any issue with my tenants. The reason I ejected the tenants on the ground floor was because they always owed me. As I speak, someone has paid for the room,” he said.

    The 70-year-old landlord added: “I used to live on the third floor. The reason I left was because of my leg. I left there even before the government officials came. It’s a family issue. My siblings and I have issues over the property and since then they have been finding means to destroy the building. They once locked me up in a police station.”

    A tenant, Samuel Sam, said it was all a family misunderstanding.

    “When the two-storey building crashed, government officials came and Baba did all what he was asked to do. His family have issues with him because of property,” he said.

    A shop owner, who didn’t give her name, said she has been occupying the place for over five years, adding that the building was not marked.

    Another tenant, simply called Baba Tosin, said he has been living there for over 40 years.

    “I have been a tenant here. Fatai and I grew up together. It is a family problem,” he said.

  • Akwa Ibom renovates 10th Anniversary building

    Akwa Ibom renovates 10th Anniversary building

    Once a hide out for miscreants and destitutes for many years, The Tenth Anniversary Hotel Complex in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State capital is now back to life.

    This comes on the heels of a massive renovation executed by the Akwa Ibom State government.

    With this renovation, The Tenth Anniversary Hotel Complex, located on the Sir Udo Udoma Avenue, Uyo, has left many in awe considering its previous state.

    Governor Emmanuel Udom, while inspecting the complex, expressed satisfaction at the level of work carried out on the building.

    He praised the Commissioner for Housing and Urban Renewal, Mr. Enobong Uwah and his counterpart in the Ministry of Special Duties,  Etido Inyang, for a job well done.

    Udom said with the completion of the renovation, ministries, agencies and parastatals occupying rented apartments would be accommodated in the building.

    He, however, declined to disclose the cost of renovation of the once moribund complex.