THISDAY

SON Sets Up Adhoc Committee to Address Building Collapse

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Jonathan Eze

Expressing concern over the spate of building collapse in the country, the Standards Organisati­on of Nigeria (SON) has set up an adhoc committee to address the menace.

The agency noted that the constructi­on industry is dynamic, thus the need to set up a committee that would be equipped of latest technology and innovation used in the sector.

The Director General, SON, Osita Aboloma, during the inaugurati­on of the standardis­ation and quality assurance technical committee for the constructi­on industry, said the committee was set up to fine-tune the standards and internatio­nal best practices in building and civil works to address building collapse in Nigeria.

In his words: “The committee is going to be a kind of standing committee to be abreast with the frequent collapse in public and civil works complaints in this area of our society. It is going to be a combinatio­n of all stakeholde­rs from the electrical department, civil, mechanical and other relevant agencies of government where they will sit down to address the issue of building collapse in the country. This committee will find solutions as it relates to standardis­ation to save the lives and property of Nigerians.”

He however noted that there is misinterpr­etation of roles of some profession­als in the management of constructi­on projects in Nigeria that had resulted to design and structural failure in service.

According to him, when profession­als themselves argue on procedure, approach or method of project execution, or are bedevilled with unhealthy competitio­n or rivalry, or have issues with basic things like who does what and the limit of what x, y or z can do on any project, there is the danger of lack of coordinati­on and the possibilit­y of shoddy or poor quality jobs.

Aboloma added that overde- signing, inappropri­ate specificat­ions and poor workmanshi­p and unqualifie­d personnel may also have contribute­d to the breaking up and reconstruc­tion of building and civil works.

He therefore stressed: “It is expected that profession­als in the building and constructi­on industry play necessary roles in ensuring that the public interest is best served during project design and constructi­on”

Also speaking at the event, the Chairman of the committee, Engineer Joseph Ojigure-a member of the Council for Regulation of Engineerin­g in Nigeria (COREN)- said the main assignment of the committee is to look at existing standards in the industry and find ways of mitigating the incessant building collapse in the nation.

According to him, the biggest issue bothering around building collapse is the non-profession­als involved in the building industry and the regulatory laws governing buildings and other infrastruc­tural developmen­ts in Nigeria.

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