Every city is built first by nature, then by people.
When we destroy the systems that protect our land, water, and climate, we eventually lose the protection they once gave us.
Nnimmo Bassey calls for Edo State to protect its forests before the consequences become irreversible.
The rain ended. Flooding didn't.
Families in Ifako are counting their losses again, but maybe the biggest problem isn't the rain; it's a city whose infrastructure can no longer keep up.
Our latest blog explores what this means for Lagos' housing future.
https://t.co/bhFoyJIHdz
Every city is built first by nature, then by people.
When we destroy the systems that protect our land, water, and climate, we eventually lose the protection they once gave us.
Nnimmo Bassey calls for Edo State to protect its forests before the consequences become irreversible.
More than 100 homes were destroyed by rainstorm in Plateau State.
The storm made headlines.
The real story is why so many homes were vulnerable in the first place.
Climate resilience shouldn't just begin after disaster strikes.
Read more 👇
https://t.co/fcByIudJKY
The type of homes Nigerians want tomorrow should already be changing how developers build today.
As the housing market evolves, long-term value is becoming less about what a home is today and more about how it should be tomorrow.
https://t.co/AmvA3oRWXt
The future competitiveness of a real estate development may depend on whether it meets the standards investors are increasingly willing to fund.
As climate-focused capital reshapes real estate, is Nigeria adapting quickly enough?
Find out more here 👇 https://t.co/kHonQZKAyg
A developer planned to build affordable homes.
Then cement hit ₦15k per bag.
Projects became costlier, and Nigeria's housing crisis got even tougher.
The government sets to meet manufacturers on July 1, 2026, and it begs a question:
Will prices fall?
https://t.co/M4OLVeJS3X
Every rainy season tells the same story:
Floods arrive first.
Help arrives later.
Nigeria has now approved ₦83.2 billion for anticipatory climate action.
The real test isn't the approval it's whether the money reaches communities before the water does.
https://t.co/lbpzw8s91M
A city flew to London.
Not to ask for help but to attract investment.
As climate leaders debate where trillions in climate finance should go, Lagos is positioning itself as an investment-ready city
Will those conversations become real projects back home?
For many Lagos tenants, the cost of renting a home has little resemblance to the rent advertised, and this is largely due to informal practices that have survived for years.
A proposed tenancy bill aims to curb these excesses and protect tenants, but then:
Will it succeed?
Nigeria has some of the most ambitious climate targets on the continent.
But the bigger question is:
Are those commitments being translated into solutions that reflect how Nigerians actually live, work, build, and adapt?
Read the full article here 👇
https://t.co/b2Iq5YD92d
If a developer's office gets sealed, the headlines celebrate accountability.
But for buyers who already paid, one question remains:
"Do we get our money back?"
The FCCPC action in Abuja raises bigger questions about how Nigeria regulates real estate.
👇
https://t.co/ndoN5dhhyx
If asked a simple question about Nigeria's property market, the answer wouldn't come easy.
A sector worth billions still lacks reliable data on prices, transactions, vacancy rates, and rental yields.
But what is this costing investors and developers?
https://t.co/hpuljdboN1