RESIDENTIAL BUILDING COLLAPSE IN NIGERIA: CAUSES, EFFECTS AND SOLUTIONS
Table Of Contents
Cover page
Title page
Certification
Dedication
Acknowledgement
Abstract
Organization of the work
Table of Contents
Project Abstract
It is quite unimaginable that a county blessed with so great
potentials in its construction industry can experience such magnitude of
building collapse Fadamiro in 2002 defined building as “an enclosure for spaces
designed for specific use, meant to control local climate, distribute services
and evacuate wasteâ€. Buildings can be defined as structural entities capable of
securing self by transmitting weights to the ground. More so, buildings are
defined “as structures for human activities, which must be safe for the
occupantsâ€(Odulami, 2002). However, these same buildings have been posing
treats and dangers to people either during or after construction as a result of
its collapse. Collapse as a whole occurs when part or whole body of a structure
fails and suddenly gives way, the structure, as a result of this failure, could
not meet the purpose for which it was meant for. Building collapse is an
extreme case of building failure. It means the super-structure crashes down
totally or partially (Arilesere, 2002). Building failure occurs when there is a
defect in one or more elements of the building caused by inability of the
material making up the components of such building elements to perform its
original function effectively, which may finally lead to building collapse. Buildings
are meant to provide conveniences and shelter to the people, but the same building
has been a danger trap to the same people. Building is expected to meet certain
basic requirements such as buildability, design performance, cost
effectiveness, quality, safety and timely completion (Olusola, Atta &
Ayangade, 2002).
Project Overview
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
Since
independence, the Nigeria government has desperately continued to make
concerted effort in the area of quantitative (but not qualitative) supply of
mass housing through huge budgetary and policy provisions but, surprisingly, the
rate at which existing ones are collapsing calls for an urgent attention. The
site of building collapse scattered across the length and breadth of Nigeria is
quite alarming that it is unimaginable what effects it will have on the
building industry and Nigeria economy as a whole. One could imagine what
edifices these buildings would have been if only they were constructed
accordingly. It has been reported that Nigeria, especially Lagos State has
become the -world’s junk-yard†of collapsed buildings worth billions of naira
(Famoroti, 2005). It is quite unimaginable that a county blessed with so great
potentials in its construction industry can experience such magnitude of
building collapse Fadamiro in 2002 defined building as -an enclosure for spaces
designed for specific use, meant to control local climate, distribute services
and evacuate wasteâ€. Buildings can be defined as structural entities capable of
securing self by transmitting weights to the ground. More so, buildings are
defined -as structures for human activities, which must be safe for the
occupantsâ€(Odulami, 2002). However, these same buildings have been posing
treats and dangers to people either during or after construction as a result of
its collapse. Collapse as a whole occurs when part or whole body of a structure
fails and suddenly gives way, the structure, as a result of this failure, could
not meet the purpose for which it was meant for. Building collapse is an
extreme case of building failure. It means the super-structure crashes down
totally or partially (Arilesere, 2002). Building failure occurs when there is a
defect in one or more elements of the building caused by inability of the
material making up the components of such building elements to perform its
original function effectively, which may finally lead to building collapse. Buildings
are meant to provide conveniences and shelter to the people, but the same building
has been a danger trap to the same people. Building is expected to meet certain
basic requirements such as buildability, design performance, cost
effectiveness, quality, safety and timely completion (Olusola, Atta &
Ayangade, 2002). Generally, buildings are expected to be elegant and functional
but many projects are constructed that do not meet any of these basic
requirements. The recurring incidence of building collapse, some of which
claimed innocent lives is a consequence of this. Many studies has been carried
out and various workshops organized in major cities of the country by various
bodies, government agencies and institution in order to look into causes of the
incidence of building collapse in Nigeria, but none has been able to come out
with how each of the determined factors directly lead to building collapse in
the country. There are many factors that cause building collapse in Nigeria and
they are structural design and quality management according to Olusola (2002).The
quality management entails material variability, testing variability, judgment factor,
contractors’ variability, poorly skilled workmen and unprofessional conduct.
The study aimed at examining the cases of residential building collapse in
Nigeria with a view of identifying the causes, effect and solution.
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Building collapse is a defect or
imperfection, deficiency or fault in a building element or component. It may
also be as a result of omission of performance. The degree of building collapse
can therefore be related to the extent or degree of deviation of a building
from the -as - built†state which is in most cases represent the acceptable
standard within the neighborhood, locality, state or country. (Ikpo, 1998).
However, building collapse can simply be defined as a total or
partial/progressive failure of one or more components of a building leading to
the inability of the building to perform its principal function of comfort,
satisfaction, safety and stability. The incessant buildings collapse in Nigeria
has become a great concern to all the stakeholders - the professionals in
building industry, government, private developers, clients and users, as well
as the neighborhood residents. Fall out of the researcher’s concern about the
increasing incidents of collapse building nation-wide form the basis for this
study to find out the major causes, effects and probable remedial measures to
collapse of buildings in Nigeria.
1.3 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The
following are the objectives of this study:
1. To
examine the causes of building collapse in Nigeria.
2. To
identify the effects of building collapse in Nigeria.
3. To
identify the remedial measures or approaches to building collapse in Nigeria
1.4 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
1. What
are the causes of building collapse in Nigeria?
2. What
are the effects of building collapse in Nigeria?
3. What
are the remedial measures or approaches to building collapse in Nigeria?
1.6 SIGNIFICANCE
OF THE STUDY
The following
are the significance of this study:
1. The
outcome of this study will educate the general public and the government of the
day on the causes, effect and solutions to the cases of building collapse in
Nigeria.
2. This
research will also serve as a resource base to other scholars and researchers
interested in carrying out further research in this field subsequently, if
applied will go to an extent to provide new explanation to the topic
1.7 SCOPE/LIMITATIONS
OF THE STUDY
This
study on residential building collapse in Nigeria with careful examination of
the causes and the effects with a view of finding a lasting solution to the
issue of incessant building collapse in Nigeria.
LIMITATION OF STUDY
Financial constraint- Insufficient fund tends to impede the
efficiency of the researcher in sourcing for the relevant materials, literature
or information and in the process of data collection (internet, questionnaire
and interview).
Time constraint- The researcher will
simultaneously engage in this study with other academic work. This consequently
will cut down on the time devoted for the research work.
REFERENCES
Arilesere,
D.
(2000). The role of professionals
in averting building collapse.
Proceedings of a
workshop on Building collapse: Causes,
prevention and remedies(pp. 60-68).
The Nigerian Institute of Building,
Lagos State.
Fadamiro, J.A. (2002). An assessment of building
regulations and standards and the implication for building collapse in Nigeria. In D.R.
Ogunsemi (Ed.), Building Collapse: Causes, prevention and remedies (pp. 28-39). The Nigerian Institute of Building,
Ondo State.
Famoroti, F. (2006, March 30). Before the next building collapse. The Punch (p. 9)
Ikpo, I. J.
(1998). Application of the Weibull Distribution Technique in the Prediction of
the Times between Failures (MTBF) of Building Components, Nigerian Journal of Construction
Technology and Management,
Vol. 1, No 1, P. 79 - 87
Odulami, A.A.
(2002). Building materials specification
and enforcement on site. InD.R. Ogunsemi
(Ed.), Building Collapse: Causes, prevention and remedies (pp. 22-27). The Nigerian Institute of Building, Ondo State
Olusola, K.O. (2002). Structural stability of building structures. In D.R.
Ogunsemi(Ed.), Building Collapse: Causes, prevention and remedies (pp. 50-73). The Nigerian Institute of Building, Ondo State.
Olusola, K.O., Ata, O. & Ayangade, J.A.(2002).
Quality and Structural Strength of sandcrete Blocks produced in Ile-Ife: A
preliminary Investigation. Journal of Environmental Technology, Federal University
of Technology, Akure,1 (1&2):136-142