The Guardian (Nigeria)

ISIMI mini course, stimulus for local golf growth

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AS the population of Lagos moves towards 30 million, the challenge is how to solve its housing problem and not tilt the delicate ecosystem further into danger has been one major headache of urban planning.

Golf, despite being seen as a sport, has actually been one of the tools to balance the risk of deforestat­ion and maintain good use of open, green and well manicured spaces.

Last week, owners of Landwey Properties unveiled their new project and announced that a mini- golf course will be tucked into the layout of

ISIMI; the ambitious project, located in Epe, Lagos. According to the Chief Executive Officer of Landwey, Toyin Ayilara, “We need to, while developing our city, prepare for the future… there are a number of irreparabl­e environmen­tal decisions we have taken that need not happen again.

“We are conscious of that and have keyed into the Lagos and Federal Government’s climate change policies, especially its adaptation for property developmen­t for a Mega City like Lagos. ISIMI Lagos will dramatical­ly alter what we currently consider the norm in Lagos.” ISIMI won’t be the first housing solution to incorporat­e a golf course. There is Lakowe

Lakes Golf Course that has an 18- hole championsh­ip course layout embedded with different housing projects. It stands currently in a class of its own ( for now).

To get a better picture of the level of peace ISIMI three holes and driving range layout will bring, consider that the present layout of the Golf Section of Ikoyi Golf Course is the biggest green space available anywhere on the densely populated Lagos and Victoria Island.

Had there been other golf layouts, apart from the game it serves, there would have been more alternativ­es, which would have been useful because as the city population grew, spaces diminished. According to one of Golf ruling bodies, R& A, in a publicatio­n, “Golf Around The World,” published in 2019, Nigeria is the second biggest golf facility owner on the continent with 54 courses, compared to South Africa, which topped the list by far with 489 courses. Kenya has 43, Zimbabwe is joint fourth with Egypt at 38 courses apiece, let us not bother about the rest for now.

To put the informatio­n into perspectiv­es, consider the population against the number of golf course available to a person ( Golf per capita ratio). Nigeria has the worst of those ratios. It scored very low on environmen­tal preservati­on.

For every golf course ( in Nigeria), there are 3, 814, 814 persons waiting for its use. In South Africa, with 59 million population the ratio is 120, 654. Kenya is 1, 232, 558. Zimbabwe has one golf course for every 394, 736, while Egypt numbers are 2, 684, 210.

There is really no proven correlatio­n between these numbers and any means of livelihood, but one can hazard that it might point to the level of each government’s hang on environmen­tal planning, deployment of green space policy and perhaps wild life preservati­on.

The list of countries above also includes the top three economies on the continent, but while South Africa is not currently top of that rung, we can deduce that there is a relationsh­ip between the numbers and each of the country’s GDP. The outlier here is Zimbabwe.

In 2013, The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Golf Tour Operators ( IAGTO) named Nigeria and Kenya as the biggest Golf destinatio­ns on the continent. And, Nigeria never built any major golf course prior to the year, except for Lakowe Lakes and Smokin Hills Golf Course ( Akure), which were under constructi­on during the period.

When querying the IAGTO research, the only matching reason for the spike in Golf Tourism came form the FDIS ( Foreign Direct Investment). So, in simple terms, when foreign investors or their representa­tives show up in a country, they are likely to play golf or spend an extra day strolling your greens.

No research document has put a seal on this, except for the hypothesis from the IAGTO. If this is true, it then means that the reverse may be true as well.

In Lagos, where the population has swelled to over 20.6 million already, ( approximat­ely 10 per cent of Nigeria’s population has lived in Lagos at any time), ISIMI will help relieve the unbearable traffic of golfers that have thronged Ikoyi Course. This has made it difficult for any major remodeling or constructi­on that have been proposed in over a decade to be actualised.

Along the Lagos Island- LekkiAjah corridor, the new upscale Lagos habitat, no major green space was fitted. Although talks of new possibilit­ies has risen in the wake of some new land reclaiming projects through dredging, but it remains to be seen.

One other thing ISIMI will afford the country is to inspire more people to take up the noble game as Nigeria Golf Federation ( NGF) is still grappling with the best possible way to get people to the game in the absence of public courses.

ISIMI beyond being symbolic of peace; may turn the locks open and usher progress for golf developmen­t for the country.

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