Lagos Expansion into Atlantic Ocean
By
2016, Lagos will get a new city to be built on nine million
square metres of reclaimed land about 2.4 kilometres into the
Atlantic Ocean, south of Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island. It
promises to be Nigeria’s most ambitious city on reclaimed land
and one of Africa’s biggest marine engineering projects.
Between now and 2016, about nine million square metres of land
would be reclaimed 2.4 kilometres south of Ahmadu Bello Way,
Victoria Island, Lagos, into the Atlantic Ocean.
The planned city is one and a half times the size of current
Victoria Island. When completed, the new island would be
called Eko Atlantic City. It is estimated to accommodate
250,000 residents and 150,000 commuters.
Already, 1.3 million square metres of prime land has been
reclaimed. This has convinced many Nigerians of the viability
of the project. Thus, many wealthy individuals and corporate
bodies have bought plots of land ahead of completion schedule.
The ambitious project is being undertaken by South Energyx
Nigeria Limited, SENL, a subsidiary of the Chaghoury Group,
which has been highly active in Nigeria for over 30 years. The
group has handled many major construction and engineering
works. SENL and the development of Eko Atlantic project were
recognised by the Clinton Global Initiative in 2009 as
committed to combating the threat of flooding to Victoria
Island from rising sea levels.
For the success of Eko Atlantic City project, SENL boasts of
partnership with some of the world’s experts in marine
engineering, land reclamation and city design as well as
strong financial backing. Royal Haskoning, a firm of Dutch
architects and engineers, is involved while Dredging
International, a Belgian company, is shouldering the massive
landfill operation.
Four banks – three local and one international – are providing
financial support for the entirely private sector project.
These are First Bank PLC, Guaranty Trust Bank PLC, First City
Monument Bank PLC and BNP Paribas Fortis of France. Diya,
Fatimilehin & Co, a firm of estate surveyors and valuers, is
marketing the gigantic prime real estate business.
Marc Chaghouri of SENL told Newswatch that the concept is to
create an international standard city. The city will cover
seven districts: Ocean Front, Harbour Lights, Business
District, Eko Drive, Marina, Avenues and Downtown.
The business district will be spread across 1.3 million square
metres dedicated to providing West Africa with a world class
commercial hub. At the heart of this district will be the Eko
Atlantic financial centre, “a key to success and prosperity.”
The centre’s imposing towers will house corporate
headquarters-banks, insurance companies, a room for stock
exchange and hotels. “It will open a new vista for Nigeria and
Africa,” Chaghouri said, adding: “The city will provide world
class property in a world class environment where people can
live and work in harmony.”
The city’s planners have incorporated round the clock
independent power generation, central water supply and sewage
disposal systems into the scheme. With a global certificate of
occupancy already given by the Lagos State government, the
developers have created a specialised planning unit to
streamline an approval process and ensure quality of
construction and integrity of each development.
There will be a light rail system with 60 stops throughout the
city and canals for light ferry services. And aside a network
of roads to ensure free traffic flow, every building must have
basement parking spaces for its occupants and visitors. “Eko
Atlantic City will have zero tolerance for street parking,”
Chaghouri said.
To protect the new city against ocean surge, SENL is building
a sea barrier which it fondly refers to as the Great Wall of
Lagos. The 6.5 kilometre long wall was designed by Royal
Haskoning and tested in Denmark by the world renowned Danish
Hydraulic Institute, DHI. Chaghouri said the result proved
that “it can withstand the worst storm imaginable in a
thousand years.” The Great Wall is already one kilometre long
when Newswatch visited last week.
Chaghouri said further that in building the wall, his company
took cognisance of the chronic erosion of the Bar Beach which
reached an unbearable peak in 2005 with severe threat of
flooding. To check further erosion, a shoreline protection
wall running along the entire length of the beach was built.
Yet the ocean remained a threat to Victoria Island. It was
against this backdrop that the idea of Eko Atlantic City
emerged principally to restore the shoreline to where it was
100 years ago and build a world class city on reclaimed land.
Consequently, the Bola Tinubu administration granted SENL the
concession to reclaim and develop land for the city in 2006.
Since then, the company has recorded a huge success. Kolawole
Diya of Diya, Fatimilehin & Co, marketing consultants to SENL
on the prime real estate, said more that 1.3 million square
metres of land is already visible and up for sale at between
$825 and $1,600 per square metre.
He said it was denominated in dollar to protect buyers against
fluctuations in the Naira exchange rate. He explained that
since the rate is not static but changes regularly at the
auctions by the Central Bank of Nigeria, buyers would be
adequately protected against the vagaries in the financial
supermarkets should the local currency depreciate sharply.
“We are proud of our currency but property transactions in
commercial nerve centres of the world are being denominated in
dollars. And Nigerian professionals have keyed in, more so, as
thousands of foreigners and foreign companies are expected to
own properties in Eko Atlantic City, Nigeria’s new gateway
into Africa in the 21st century,” he said.
Victoria Island was originally surrounded by water – Atlantic
Ocean in the south, the mouth of the Lagos Lagoon to the west,
the five Cowrie Creek to the north and swamps on the east. The
colonial government filled the eastern swamps to reduce
mosquito breeding areas. This created a land bridge between
the island and Lekki peninsula, thus ending its existence as a
true island.
After independence, successive state governments expanded this
development, culminating in the construction of a high way
linking Victoria Island to Epe. VI, as it is popularly called,
was initially intended for suburban residential development
but became an attractive location for financial institutions
and other businesses in the 1970s. The rapid expansion
seriously outstretched limited amenities and resources. The
developers of the new city hope to have independently reliable
infrastructure to avoid the mistakes of the past without the
government investing its scarce funds in it.
culled from www.dredgingtoday.com
