For decades, Nigeria has battled a quiet epidemic—construction failures. Source: PreventionWeb
For decades, Nigeria has battled a quiet epidemic—construction failures. These aren’t isolated events but part of a dangerous pattern rooted in poor construction practices, regulatory failure, and a troubling culture of cost-cutting. From Lagos to Jos, from residential buildings to government infrastructure, collapses have become alarmingly common.
Studies show that the collapse of buildings in Nigeria is often due to a toxic mix of unqualified contractors, substandard materials, and ineffective site supervision. Developers routinely sidestep soil testing and structural analysis, relying instead on unverified designs to save money. Contractors, use inferior building materials—often uncertified and untested. As a result, over 2,500 construction-related accidents have been recorded in recent years on major sites like Rama II Road. In Lagos alone, over 115 buildings have collapsed in the last decade.
Building Collapses in Lagos, 2000-2021. Source: PreventionWeb
With minimal consequences and lax enforcement, this cycle continues. Experts argue that Nigeria’s urban centers, particularly Lagos, urgently need thousands of trained building inspectors. Until enforcement matches the pace of construction, lives will continue to be at risk.
A Governor’s Frustration Boils Over
In a rare moment of political intervene, Jigawa State Governor Umar Namadi publicly condemned the ₦10.8 billion Gully Erosion Control Project during an on-site visit. Designed to protect erosion-prone communities like Kargo and Danmasara, the project was funded under the Agro-Climatic Resilience in Semi-Arid Landscape (ACReSAL) program, with support from the World Bank.
"This is unacceptable; water will wash this away," the governor exclaimed as he scratched the surface of a concrete section. His anger was not performative—it reflected a deep betrayal of trust. The project, meant to last 100 years, already showed signs of structural weakness just months after construction began.
The contractor, and site consultants were grilled by the governor, who rejected excuses about SON (Standards Organisation of Nigeria) approval. “It should be done according to my standards,” he fired back, before ordering immediate rework on the faulty areas.
The exact moment where the Governor Mr Namadi scratched the surface of a concrete structure, unveiling structural weakness.
Breaking the Cycle: Accountability or Repetition?
Governor Namadi’s intervention is significant, not just for his state, but for Nigeria as a whole. His outrage highlights what has long plagued public infrastructure: projects awarded in good faith, executed in bad practice. But will this be a turning point or just another viral video?
To truly change course, Nigeria must do more than scold contractors—it must institutionalize quality. That means mandatory soil tests, credible structural designs, independent quality control, and strict penalties for substandard execution. It means treating building safety as a national security issue, not a bureaucratic checkbox.
Until then, every concrete pour in Nigeria risks becoming another headline. Check out the following video, showcasing the Governor Namadi’s site visit.
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