The Nigerian Institute of Building (NIOB) has said that Lagos State accounts for 60 per cent of reported cases of building collapse in Nigeria.
National
President of the institute, Kunle Awobodu, who disclosed this at the
groundbreaking ceremony of NIOB, yesterday in Abuja, said professionalism in
building construction remained the first step to reducing sub-standard building
construction practices across the country.
He said:
“There have been many building collapse cases in Nigeria. Conservatively, Lagos
accounts for about 60 per cent of the figure of collapsed buildings.
“The
worrisome question is: how many of those who have participated in the
construction of collapsed buildings have been prosecuted?”
He spoke on the need for Nigerians to engage the services of trained and
certified builders who have been licensed by the Council of Registered Builders
of Nigeria (COBON), adding that quackery remains the cause of building collapse
in the country.
He said
March 13 was chosen in commemoration of the collapse of a five-storey
residential building at 63, Massey Street, Ita-Faaji, Lagos Island, in 2019,
leading to the death of over 20 pupils.
He noted
that the incident was an avoidable calamity that elicited worldwide
condemnation. Awobodu said the outcome of investigation into the Ita-Faaji
building collapse and several similar past cases in Lagos made the state
government to stipulate in its Building Regulations of 2019 that building
construction sites across the state should be managed by
registered/professional builders.
The NIOB
president added that the association had offered a pro bono service to check
substandard structures for demolition across the country. He said that the
activities of quacks had put many lives in danger, disclosing that the
association had concluded that it would work with relevant government ministries
to curb the incessant building collapse.
He
said: “In a pro bono exercise engendered by need for social responsibility,
builders will pay visits to various building sites across the country to
provide clients, developers and their workers technical advice and construction
techniques that will help uplift and sustain the serviceability of their
buildings.”
He
said those who fail to comply with professional advice would have their
structures demolished as guided by the law, adding: “We hereby enjoin the Federal
Government, through the Minister of Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Raji
Fashola, to expedite further actions on the National Building Code project.
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