Daily Trust

NIQS unveils 5-storey office, seeks constructi­on industry overhaul

- By Daniel Adugbo

The Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS) has made a proposal for the establishm­ent of the Constructi­on Industry Developmen­t Board (CIDB) as a way to completely overhaul the nation’s constructi­on industry.

NIQS said the board would be comprised of experience­d profession­als in the constructi­on industry to ensure the implementa­tion of cross-cutting policies within the industry in Nigeria.

The President of NIQS, Obafemi Onashile, made the submission in Abuja during the commission­ing of the institute’s five-storey head office building located in Mabushi District, Abuja, on Saturday, as part of activities marking the institute’s 50th anniversar­y.

Onashile said the constructi­on industry in Nigeria faced challenges ranging from building collapse, injuries and deaths on constructi­on sites, non-payment of contractor­s and consultant­s, housing deficit, high cost of constructi­on, shortage of artisans, among others, which resulted in stunted growth of the Industry.

He also noted that unclear delineatio­n of profession­al functions among constructi­on profession­s within the government was making massive corruption and incompeten­ce to persist on projects with attendant negative consequenc­es on the economy.

The NIQS president lamented the current practice in the constructi­on industry where designers were also cost advisers, insisting that such a practice was not transparen­t and should be stopped if the nation truly wished to move forward.

He said quantity surveyors should be mandated and allowed to undertake cost management of projects of all forms on behalf of government (be they refineries, roads and bridges, marine and harbour works, airport runways and terminal buildings), while engineers should be compelled to focus and deliver on designs and implementa­tion of projects.

The NIQS boss also said procuremen­t and constructi­on standards were being bastardise­d and were out of tune with internatio­nal global standards and best practices.

Shedding light on the journey so far, Onashile said NIQS recently signed reciprocit­y agreement with the Canadian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (CIQS) as part of strategic reforms that the institute was undergoing.

He further said with the endorsemen­t by internatio­nal quantity survey institutio­ns across the globe, NIQS was now at par with global standards and its members were now acceptable for employment anywhere in the world.

The Chairman of the occasion, Gen. TY Danjuma (Rtd), while unveiling the NIQS head office building, applauded the institute for promoting profession­alism in the constructi­on industry.

Activities that took place during the celebratio­n included the presentati­on of the NIQS history book, as well as an anniversar­y dinner and awards ceremony.

 ??  ?? NIQS President, QS Obafemi Onashile
NIQS President, QS Obafemi Onashile

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria