Can Low-Income Earners Build a Home?

Grand Luvu Estate in Abuja buit by Millard Fuller Foundation

With the recession lingering and hitting hard on real estate sector, many prospective homeowners are dumping the idea of homeownership, while others want to build a simple home that is comfortable and affordable, without going into debt.
 
It is a fact that in most Nigerian cities, the dreams of lower construction costs have once again become a nightmare for a lot of aspiring homeowners, going by fresh increases in the prices
of basic building materials. For instance, retail prices of cement has remained high, about N2, 700 per bag while manufacturers of cement-based materials, such as ceiling boards, roofing sheets and concrete products have hiked their prices.
 
Consequently, the development has further slowed down housing construction, real estate activities and increased the prices of other building materials’ component.  Developers in the Nigerian housing market focus almost exclusively on the luxury residential market. However, this market segment is already experiencing an oversupply.

Then, how affordable can owning a home be for most Nigerians? A recent survey published by KPMG, stated that 77 per cent of Nigerians earn less than N40, 000 monthly – a segment described as the ‘bottom mass market’. Affordability for this level would be determined as a house costing no more than 30 per cent of N40, 000 (N12, 000).
 
Over a 10-year period (most housing loans available in Nigeria are of a much shorter tenure), and at a remarkable interest rate of 6 per cent (as obtained from the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria), such a house would be valued at about N1.1millon. This is a shocking revelation for most people, yet this is the reality in which we live in Nigeria. ‘Who can build a home for such an amount?

For Mr. Sam Odia, the Chief Executive Officer, Millard Fuller Foundation (MFF), “Affordability is determined by a number of factors, key of which are the income level of the buyer, the cost of land, materials and labour that go into building the house and the cost of funds.”

MFF has been involved in producing simple, decent and very affordable homes from N1.65million for ordinary Nigerians. The 400-unit Grand Luvu Affordable estate is located in Masaka, near Abuja. On this project, subscribers pay about N12, 000 per month.

He said: “From our own experience, the material component of a building actually accounts for less than 35 per cent of the final cost of the home. Our house designs are also very frugal and economical in the use of space.”

The Managing Director, Bolyn Construction Company Limited, Mr. Rufus Akinrolabu said the solution lies in the sourcing and use of local materials in Nigeria’s construction industry.

For more than two decades, the company has fabricated machines from metals and steels, which mould bricks, roofing sheets, and other building materials, using laterite soil and other raw materials.

As evidence of his belief in the crusade, Akinrolabu built his private home in Ikorodu, Lagos and completed a second country home at his Ondo residence as well as an office building for his Lagos based company. He said builders using the technology could make up to 50 per cent savings.

He told The Guardian, “you can make bricks that do not require cement because laterite soil that we are preaching is a soil that contains an addictive from God; clay is free.

According to him, majority of Nigerians do not want anything that is local. They are ashamed and so for them, the prices and cost of building will continue to rise untill they are ready to use local materials.
 
Similarly, Executive Director, Shelter Origins Limited, Ezekiel Ojo said a one- bedroom self-contained could be built for between N800, 000 and N1million with the conventional blocks.

Ojo, who was involved in several affordable housing models in Nigeria with the use of mud and bricks, said there is no technology that can deliver guarantee affordable houses without government intervention.

According to him, government must make land available, provide infrastructure and security then people can build their houses with less than N1million.

To the President, Nigerian Institute of Architects (NIA), Tonye Oliver Braide, affordable housing can be achieved through the introduction of an industrialization process in the production of the housing units.

Using modular repetitive components, he said, it is possible to cut costs by up to 20 per cent through dimension control in which every component is made to fit perfectly thereby eliminating wastes.

Braide, who disclosed that the Institute is already engaging stakeholders in the built environment on the matter, said when all components of the meeting are settled Nigerians will be able to build a three-bed room flat at the region of N2-3million.

According to him, the outcome of the meeting will be a working decision on the issue of affordable housing among professionals in the built environment.
 
Other components that are critical in building price reduction, he said, includes design, which should be straightforward, unambiguous cost effective and production of building components on site. “There should be minimal wastage of space on circulation with the maximum utilization to be programmed for available floor space.”

He also canvassed the production of building components on sites to achieve cheaper houses. “It is known that when blocks are moulded on site, the process eliminates the additional costs of transportation and handling.

“Adequate site management, should be able to tackle the challenge of quality control and theft of materials. Roofing sheets can also be corrugated on site, as it is easier to transport coils to site than move pre-cut long span sheets”.

“There are cases where the cost of transportation of roofing components from remote factories could be at par with the purchase price of the roofing sheets. This means that the roof for a low cost house in a rural area will cost two times the cost of the same operation on a site in an urban area close to the factory”.

“Roofing sheets can be made of concrete as tiles and fabricated on site. This is a low skill operation and can be driven with solar energy. The resultant cost of the roof will be quite reasonable and far below factory produced tiles.”





Source - Theguardian

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