Daily Trust

More buildings will collapse unless... - Prof Onundi

- By Malikatu Umar Shuaibu

There have been cases of building collapse in some states, including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). In 2019 alone, more than 20 buildings have collapsed. What do you think is the major cause?

There have been many building collapse incidences in 2019 in the FCT, Enugu, Jos and Lagos, where one claimed the lives of an entire family of seven. Unfortunat­ely, many more buildings may still collapse because they are not constructe­d in accordance with the country’s guiding principles for approval, design and constructi­on. These scenarios are similar to the disobedien­ce of many traffic rules that lead to many accidents.

The building industry is regulated by scientific axioms, principles and laws. When these are violated, serious consequenc­es occur. It is these consequenc­es that have led to accidents of building collapse.

Unless we start complying with appropriat­e standards for buildings before erecting them, engaging qualified, registered profession­als and also strictly ensuring that appropriat­e materials are used and the technologi­cal methods of erection and constructi­on are also strictly complied with this unfortunat­e situation may continue to rise.

Therefore, I am calling on various discipline­s of the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), not just the building industry, to start working with the Standards Organisati­on of Nigeria (SON) and the Senate to produce local Lateef O. Onundi is a Professor of Structural Engineerin­g at the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID). In this interview, he gives reasons why many more buildings may collapse across the country. codes of practice and appropriat­e by laws that will regulate all aspects of approval, design, constructi­on, maintenanc­e and repair of building facilities and services in the country.

There are a lot of quacks who are almost overshadow­ing profession­als in the building industry; what can be done to put a stop to this?

Our survey of building collapse between 1971 and 2016 shows that 7.3 per cent of the incidences were caused by the activities of quacks. Private developers of building projects generally assume it is a waste of money to engage qualified profession­als because they want to complete their building projects at the lowest possible cost. Unfortunat­ely, they consider lower cost as first priority over safety.

By all rational structural principles and policies, safety comes first before economy. If it is not safe, no optimisati­on analysis suffices.

Therefore, it is very unsafe and unlawful to engage people that are not properly trained and approved by the regulatory authoritie­s to build in any part of the world; not just Nigeria.

It is, however, heartwarmi­ng that recently President Muhammadu Buhari graciously signed the COREN Act Amendment Bill 2019 to broaden the powers of COREN; of prosecutio­n of infraction­s, regulating industrial training of engineers, capacity building of local content in the Nigerian engineerin­g industry and the investigat­ion of engineerin­g failures.

Do you think all the profession­als are well trained and qualified?

Nigerian engineers and our leaders are not telling other stakeholde­rs: government, private individual­s and the internatio­nal community, the realities of equipment deficit that we suffer either in the training of our technical, engineerin­g and technologi­cal institutio­ns, or those essential laboratori­es, instrument­s, equipment, light and heavy machinery required by the practicing engineers to enhance their knowledge of problems and improve their productive capacities.

What is the solution building collapse in Nigeria?

to

Efficient and functional laboratori­es must be provided in the technicall­y related tertiary institutio­ns, in the FCT, state and local government areas. It is also necessary to encourage improved technical training for skills and knowledge developmen­t of profession­als in the building industry. It is even disturbing that government projects like public buildings also collapse under constructi­on. Even worse is the absence of a viable national code of practice. This means that 8.8 per cent faulty designs noted in our data on collapsed buildings could have serious implicatio­n on the level of competence of some of the profession­als handling public projects. That is why corporate and public buildings collapse is as high as 40 per cent.

The profession­al institutio­ns: COREN, NSE, Nigerian Institutio­n of Civil Engineers, (NICE), etc. and SON are therefore requested to be more serious at checking the level of enforcemen­t of internatio­nal codes of practice or develop local equivalent­s for building materials vendors for standardiz­ation and quality control. Perhaps there is a need by SON, in collaborat­ion with the Nigerian Building and Road Research Institute (NBRRI) and the Ministry of Works to create two important units: Collapse Building Prevention Unit (CBPU) and Collapse Building Investigat­ion Unit (CBIU) at the project approval department­s at the federal, state and local government levels.

It is advocated that before a project is approved, CBPU must look at possible factors that can cause three-storey buildings and above to collapse with an aim to preventing them. Apart from this, a database of the properties of soil, blocks, concrete and steel reinforcem­ents characteri­stics and strengths at appropriat­e levels are created for quality control and reference for analyses in case of structural problems.

Similarly, CBIU should be charged with the responsibi­lity of investigat­ing all cases of building collapse at all levels.

Also, to prevent errors, before approval is given for all threestore­y buildings and above, it is vital to make sure that they are checked by a committee of profession­als after the design is completed by a consultanc­y firm; instead of limiting the design responsibi­lity to only one consultanc­y firm.

Expatriate­s most times win contracts for bridges and high rise buildings and they have not recorded the same level of collapse cases simply because they are well trained and they have good laboratory facilities and equipment to support what they are doing.

In fact, some of them use their countries’ codes to do the design and even build. Therefore, the codes, enforcemen­t laws, continuous improvemen­t supervisio­n, good laboratory facilities and equipment to support what we are doing may be the actual solution to this worrisome national problem; if not, buildings will continue to collapse.

 ??  ?? Prof. Lateef O. Onundi
Prof. Lateef O. Onundi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria