Residents of Makoko/Iwaya Waterfront in Yaba Local Council
Development Area, LCDA, will soon begin to enjoy the luxury of a
floating school jointly built by the United Nations Development
Programme, UNDP and NLE Works, Nigeria.
The three storey floating building is part of the regeneration plan for the coastal community.
According to the builders the construction of the school is aimed at
achieving the Millennium Development Goals, MDGs, Goal II, which is to
boost universal primary education.
This came barely eight months after the Lagos State government demolished hundreds of ‘illegal structures in the area.
When reporters visited the site of the floating school at the
weekend, residents of the community were already heaving a sigh of
relief, anticipating that many of their children will now have access to
sound education.
Sources gathered that the new primary school named ‘Makoko floating
School’, was built on a foundation of 256 plastic drums and powered by
solar panels suspended on the roof. Investigation further revealed that,
many residents are praying that the design will be approved by governor
Babatunde Fashola.
Sources also told newsmen that the floating school cost N993, 750 ($6, 250), because of its size.
Mr. John Adugbo, a resident of Makoko, said; “We have been waiting
for the project that will aid more children to attend school. Presently,
many children don’t have access to good educational facilities.”
Adugbo added; “All we have is a school that was constructed to serve
as a palliative measure because of our peculiar challenge of being
surrounded by water.”
The founder of NLE, and promoter of the floating school, Mr. Kunle
Adeyemi who spoke to newsmen from his Netherland office, said; “The
desire to construct the school was burn out of curiosity after I visited
the community and interest in the coastal community, where despite the
little income made daily by the breadwinners, they have never stopped
developing the infrastructure.”
Explaining the building’s features, Adeyemi said “The ground floor of
the school would serve as an open recreational space for the pupils
during the day and at night and weekends, their fathers can converge and
hold meetings.”
He added that the first floor and the upper floor have classrooms that would serve their primary purpose.
According to him, “the structure will accommodate over 100 students
and their teachers and it is an extension of the only existing school in
the coastal community.”
A source gathered that the community which has over 100, 000
residents has only one primary school, called ‘Whayinna Nursery and
Primary school’ and no secondary.
Adeyemi continued “the floating school is an extension of the
existing primary school which could only provide sound education service
to less than 200 children in the community. The state government can
also adopt the structure for all the coastal communities in the state,”
he added.
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