Lagos-based design and construction
company, HubCT
Technologies Ltd. (also known as HTL), is set to exhibit a model of its impression
of design and urban planning in 21st century Africa named
“Affordacity And The Invention Of Isi-Ewu”.
The
exhibition is supported by the Federal Republic of Germany through the
Consulate General in Lagos and the Goethe Institut.
The idea for the “Affordacity And The
Invention Of Isi-Ewu” coincides with the recent signing of the Lagos Smart City
project by the Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode.
According
to the founder and Head of Design James George, “as architects and urban
designers, we are merely cooks. We have limits to our creativity and can either,
on one hand, make light broth or, on the more extreme, make Isi-ewu.”
“Africa
is a mix of population explosion, sporadic economic booms (Nigeria and Egypt
are numbers 23 and 32 largest economies in the world according to the World Bank)
and sheer indifference. As such, the continent dictates a new kind of architectural
response. An urban architectural response that looks not only at itself but
helps to make the economy around it more buoyant”, he adds.
“This
entails the creation of interconnected city ecosystems that can merge with
decaying old African cities to improve their performance. A city must be like
an iPhone. It must perform. And the parameters of its performance must be
measurable in real time. It will be an architecture of completeness…a
CITY-ARCHITECTURE. It is this that will be known as Affordacity™”, he
concludes.
To
summarize, Bayo Omisore, Head of Business Development, says: “Affordacity is,
simply put, affordable city. The idea, which birthed the design and, eventually
the exhibit itself, came from sleepless nights of research on the best solution
to the paucity of affordable real estate to millions of middle class Nigerians.
Our exhibit will reveal our innermost thoughts on the merger of exquisite, yet
sensible, design with relatively cheap constructions topped up with farm-housing
as never seen in these parts.”
The
exhibition, which starts on the 8th of October 2016 at the Goethe
Institut, holds sway at the venue until the 7th of November 2016 before moving
to the University of Lagos.
HTL is owned by South Africa-based architect
and artist James George and renowned writer Bayo Omisore.
For further details or enquiries about HTL or the exhibition,
please feel free to contact me on +234 (0) 706 533 8250 and ibayoomisore@gmail.com.
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