Marolan Construction has been turning ideas and dreams into solid structures for years.
We don't do gimmicks. We're a team of professionals and experienced builders who live by three simple values:
Quality • Integrity • Excellence
Are we ANY DIFFERENT?
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While u scroll someone is building your tomorrow. Respect the grind.Tag a hardworking person you respect, let's celebrate real hustlers today. Happy worker's day from @MarolanCon
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structionNG#BuildWithMarolan#HomeRenovation
From the ground up, we build with purpose.
A day on site with Marolan Construction,laying foundations, raising standards, and turning plans into homes in Lagos.
Your dream isn’t far off. Let’s build it right @MarolanCon#BuildWithMarolan#ConstructionNG#LagosBuilders
Renovation isn’t just about breaking and building, it’s about timing.Rush it, and you’ll pay for delays.Plan it right, and everything flows. Book inspections ahead. Work with people who actually know what they’re doing.
Build smart. Renovate smarter.
#MarolanConstruction
Brick brings warmth and life to buildings. I bet no other building material does it better.
📍 Vadodara,India
Architects: TRAANSPACE, URVI SHAH & SVN CONSULTANTS
📸 TEJAS SHAH
Gando School Extension proves that building with the right materials and climate in mind creates lasting value—not just structures. That’s the same standard @MarolanCon drives in Nigeria.
Architecture starts with listening, not just building.
That’s the same approach @MarolanCon takes, respecting the land, the people, and building for legacy, not just structures.
Before laying a single brick, the architect came to speak with the village elders. He asked permission. He asked where the sacred places were.
Then he built a school around the ancestral Néré trees that were already there.
Bangre Veenem School Complex in Youlou, Burkina Faso serves children from nursery to high school. Compressed earth bricks. Thick stone walls. Double roof for ventilation. No air conditioning required, students say they’re comfortable enough to concentrate.
The school also reduced its footprint by 40% to preserve the community’s farmland.
This is what it looks like when architecture respects what was there before it arrived.
More photos in the comments.
📍 Koudougou, Burkina Faso 🇧🇫
🏛 Albert Faus
📷 Milena Villalba
This is more than architecture, it’s a system that sustains life. Local bricks, natural cooling, energy, water, food… everything working together.
That’s the direction @MarolanCon is pushing in Nigeria,building not just houses, but self-sustaining homes that actually make sense.
Swedish architects designed more than just a building in Tanzania 🇹🇿 they created a home that sustains itself and the children who live in it.
Built for 25 children, the children centre uses traditional burnt bricks for its walls, staying rooted in local materials and methods. The corrugated steel roof sits on a wooden frame, with a clever gap that allows airflow and is kept safe with sisal poles to stop birds from nesting inside.
But what makes it truly special is how it works as a system: Solar panels power the home, rainwater is harvested and stored and biogas plant turns waste into cooking gas
And it doesn’t stop there ,the surrounding land is used to grow food and raise livestock, making the centre largely self-sufficient.
What Nzinga B. Mboup is doing isn’t new, it’s a return to what works.
Same energy with @MarolanCon in Nigeria, building with materials like red bricks that fit our climate.
We didn’t lack solutions, we just left them.
Africa’s most honest architecture is increasingly coming from its women.
Nzinga B. Mboup grew up between Mozambique, Cameroon, South Africa and Senegal. She saw what colonial urbanism did to African cities. Then she decided to build differently.
Her practice Worofila works with compressed earth bricks, typha plant fiber, and self-supporting earthen vaults, materials that have kept people cool in West Africa for centuries. In Dakar, where concrete dominates because it’s cheap and politically convenient, that is a radical act.
She puts it plainly: “Why did we ever stop building with earth?”
Nobody has a good answer.
Nzinga B. Mboup | Worofila | Dakar, Senegal 🇸🇳
When materials work with the climate, everything else aligns.
That’s the mindset @MarolanCon is bringing to Nigeria. smart, durable, climate-conscious building.
Brick has thermal mass. It absorbs heat during the day and releases it slowly at night. No AC running all day. No imported cladding. Just a material that understands the climate it sits in.
House Lincoln; Lane Cove, Sydney, Australia. A 1950s brick bungalow extended with a new brick tower. Same material, same logic, decades apart. The addition doesn’t fight the original, it continues it.
This is how we should build for our climate.
More photos in the comments.
Those Architects | Sydney, Australia 🇦🇺
📷 Luc Remond
Bricks isn't just for walls, it's a full design language. Imagine this level of execution in Nigeria with @MarolanCon that's how you build legacy. Build smarter. Build timeless
Brick used to its full potential.
Mid-Ridge Villa Isfahan, Iran. Walls, arches, vaulted ceilings, floor edging. One material. Total commitment. The ochre brick complements the landscape around it: blue sky, green trees, sandy ground. Nothing out of place.
Designed by EZ Studio Isfahan, Iran 🇮🇷
📷 EZ Studio
Rwanda is setting the pace with rent-to-own housing. Pay today, own tomorrow.
Now imagine this with premium red bricks by @MarolanCon,stronger homes, lasting value.
Rwanda is set to introduce a rent-to-own affordable housing initiative for low-income earners.
The tenants will pay monthly rent and an additional amount that accumulates over the years to acquire the property.
Germany built this in 2025. Handmade clay brick. Locally sourced. A 140-year-old family kiln.
Europe is rediscovering what Africa never had to lose.
Willy-Brandt-Strasse 69 Hamburg, Germany. Christ & Gantenbein used brick to heal a city fragmented since World War II. Not concrete. Not glass. BRICK.
The material is not primitive. The decision to abandon it is.
Architects: Christ & Gantenbein
📍 Hamburg, Germany 🇩🇪
📷 Simon Menges
Shortcuts everywhere… and it shows.
This is what building right looks like.
No cracks. No stress. Just value.
@MarolanCon is raising the bar.Catch up or get left behind. 🔥
1906 and this building in benin Is still standing strong today. That's over a century of durability and timeless beauty.@MarolanCon , we're bringing that standard back using premium red bricks and modern design. The future will remember what you build today. Make it count
Egedege N'Okaro, the 1st storey building in Benin was built in 1906 by Chief Iyamu from red furnace-fired bricks with wooden decking. The design of the building was given to Chief Iyamu by a Briton, Mr. Crawe Reade, a colonial officer who supervised its construction.
Now THIS is how you use red bricks. Red bricks architecture like this isn't just designs, it is legacy.
Arches on arches and it still looks clean!
Nigeria needs more of this energy
@MarolanCon is already pushing that standard.
Premium quality red bricks are the real deal in Nigeria right now that’s why @MarolanCon is leading the conversation, delivering durable, climate-smart homes with timeless aesthetics and long-term value for Nigerian builders and homeowners.
Vietnam again. Brick is not a primitive material, it’s a climate solution.
The Bat Trang House wraps a 740m² family home in a porous ceramic facade inspired by the pottery village it sits in. Trees grow through the center. The courtyard pulls air through every floor. Heat and light filtered naturally through jali screens.
Working with your climate instead of fighting it. The material existed. The knowledge existed. The decision was all that was missing.
More images from this project are in the comments🧵
📍 Bat Trang House, Hanoi, Vietnam
🏛 VTN Architects
📷 Hiroyuki Oki
Let’s reintroduce building with red bricks. The standard is set,modern aesthetics, durability, and premium quality. With @MarolanCon, every landlord should aim for this level of excellence.