An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria

The research investigated the causes and consequence of building collapse in Nigeria using historical data from 1974 to 2006 and also proffers appropriate solutions. Relevant books, seminar papers, workshop papers, articles, etc. were reviewed so as to examine the general view of individuals that ha...

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Main Author: Oke Ayodeji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Malaya 2011-12-01
Series:Journal of Design and the Built Environment
Subjects:
Online Access:http://e-journal.um.edu.my/filebank/published_article/3294/Vol%209-3.pdf
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spelling doaj-897ec6907b0c4584b7f0cf3494594c462020-11-25T00:12:35ZengUniversity of MalayaJournal of Design and the Built Environment1823-42082232-15002011-12-01913748An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria Oke Ayodeji 0Department of Quantity Surveying, Federal University of Technology, Akure 234034 Ondo State NigeriaThe research investigated the causes and consequence of building collapse in Nigeria using historical data from 1974 to 2006 and also proffers appropriate solutions. Relevant books, seminar papers, workshop papers, articles, etc. were reviewed so as to examine the general view of individuals that have worked on similar study. Data for the study were obtained through historical data of past building collapse in Nigeria. The data were presented and analysed using tables, bar graphs, Pearson moment correlation coefficient (r) and linear regression analysis to generate a model. Sixty (60) buildings that collapsed in the country were gathered, upon which the analysis was carried out. The study revealed that poor maintenance culture, design error, poor quality of materials and workmanship, natural phenomenon and excessive loading contributed to about 7%, 15%, 52%, 7% and 20% respectively of building collapse in Nigeria with most of them being private residential buildings executed by indigenous contractors. The study finally recommended that Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) should increase their effort in sanitizing building materials in the market. More so, construction professionals should ensure proper supervision of workmen and efficient checking of materials before incorporation into building works.http://e-journal.um.edu.my/filebank/published_article/3294/Vol%209-3.pdfBuilding CollapseNigeriaHistorical
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oke Ayodeji
spellingShingle Oke Ayodeji
An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria
Journal of Design and the Built Environment
Building Collapse
Nigeria
Historical
author_facet Oke Ayodeji
author_sort Oke Ayodeji
title An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria
title_short An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria
title_full An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria
title_fullStr An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed An Examination of the Causes and Effects of Building Collapse in Nigeria
title_sort examination of the causes and effects of building collapse in nigeria
publisher University of Malaya
series Journal of Design and the Built Environment
issn 1823-4208
2232-1500
publishDate 2011-12-01
description The research investigated the causes and consequence of building collapse in Nigeria using historical data from 1974 to 2006 and also proffers appropriate solutions. Relevant books, seminar papers, workshop papers, articles, etc. were reviewed so as to examine the general view of individuals that have worked on similar study. Data for the study were obtained through historical data of past building collapse in Nigeria. The data were presented and analysed using tables, bar graphs, Pearson moment correlation coefficient (r) and linear regression analysis to generate a model. Sixty (60) buildings that collapsed in the country were gathered, upon which the analysis was carried out. The study revealed that poor maintenance culture, design error, poor quality of materials and workmanship, natural phenomenon and excessive loading contributed to about 7%, 15%, 52%, 7% and 20% respectively of building collapse in Nigeria with most of them being private residential buildings executed by indigenous contractors. The study finally recommended that Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) should increase their effort in sanitizing building materials in the market. More so, construction professionals should ensure proper supervision of workmen and efficient checking of materials before incorporation into building works.
topic Building Collapse
Nigeria
Historical
url http://e-journal.um.edu.my/filebank/published_article/3294/Vol%209-3.pdf
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