agbameta: 1:27pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
  
The luxurious Eko Atlantic on Victoria Island in Lagos
The Eko Atlantic project is a city that will reach international standards
The city of the future could well be a very interesting place in which to live. Forget the hectic, jam-packed urban decay that marks most modern cities: the metropolis of the future will be a clean, efficient and - above all else - thoroughly pleasant place to inhabit.
That’s the dream at any rate. Futurologist Jacque Fresco has been working for years on the Venus Project, a grand plan that reinvents the very notion of a city, and even our whole society, through a design he calls the ‘resource-based economy’.
What is most striking is that this development may not appear first in the west, but in developing nations. In particular: in Africa
The new Africa
The stereotype of urban Africa isn’t a pretty one: mention Cairo, Lagos or Nairobi to the average westerner and crime, slums and poverty are what comes to mind. So the news that Africa is in the process of creating multiple, highly advanced urban developments, including brand-new megacities (designed to house over 10 million people) is somewhat at odds with our preconceived ideas about the continent.
Africa has big plans for its future. And these involve moving rapidly towards the urbanisation of its one billion citizens. A UN report published in 2012 predicts that "Africa's urban population is expected to more than triple from 414 million to 1.26 billion people by the year 2050."
These people are not expected to live in the slum dwellings that blight current African megacities: Cairo already has 19.5 million citizens, but eight million are estimated to live in slum dwellings (up to one million live live in Manshiet alone).
Fresco is no stranger to poverty. "It was during the Great Depression of 1929," he says, "I lived in New York then and I was exposed to many different ideas, but none of them seemed comprehensive, so I started working on a plan for a new type of society, that would eliminate most of the problems that exist today."
The Venus Project
This plan became the Venus Project: a sustainable city based upon energy efficiency, natural resource management and advanced automation. This is combined with a socio-economic system based on social cooperation.
But such a dramatically different vision for the city is harder to create in an already urbanized area: people are resistant to change. It’s far more likely to happen in an area where new developments are desperately wanted. Teo Kermeliotis, writing for CNN describes what is happening in Africa: "From the Konza technopolis outside Nairobi, to King City near the emerging port of Takoradi, Ghana, through the luxurious Eko Atlantic on Victoria Island in Lagos, these urban projects are designed to offer high-quality services and modern infrastructure."
Lagos is in a similar situation to Cairo, and is already rapidly evolving away from its slum-town image. Professor Johnson Bade Falade, habitat program manager for Nigeria, told CNN that a number of socio-economic factors have led to Lagos experiencing an "astronomical growth". "At the time Lagos was growing there wasn't too much importance attached to physical planning," he explained. "We were left with the kinds of challenges that cities are growing, planning is not complete."
The Eko Atlantic development in Lagos is a sign of things to come. This impressive residential and business development is being built primarily to protect Victoria Island from coastal erosion and the threat of flooding. This three and a half square miles of land is based on Manhattan, and is expected to provide accommodation for 250,000 people and employment opportunities for a further 150,000.
"This is a city for the 21st century, we are not using an old model," says David Frame, managing director of Eko Atlantic. "We are finding ways and means to produce a city that will reach international standards."
The luxurious Eko Atlantic on Victoria Island in Lagos
Better infrastructure
To this end Lagos has launched new rapid-transit bus systems, reliable urban railways and a fleet of new rubbish collection lorries to prevent the new area descending into squalor. "We have a lot of opportunity for recreational facilities as well as providing a core business centre and a good place to live right on the coast of Lagos," says Eko Atlantic’s Frame.
Perhaps more than any other continent on Earth Africa sorely needs these kinds of projects. De Buys Scott, KPMG Africa head of infrastructure, says: "The gap between where Africa is and where we could be is huge...businesses cite road and transport infrastructure challenges as obstacles to functioning properly. Overcoming this will enhance the working environment for business.” In the view of Sue Bannister, a partner at City Insight: "The world today is about cities. Cities are where it is happening these days. Research show that cities make people smarter and more creative."
Impact on life
All of which sounds amazing, but only for those people lucky enough to live in the city. For those moving to a city there can be problems of homelessness and human congestion, which are less positive. And the process of renewal can be harsh on residents. “The Lagos State government has perpetrated a lot of human-rights abuses in urban slums, forcibly evicting communities without any warning or planning and without any remedy, settlement, or compensation, in their effort to develop the city," Felix Morka, the director of the Social and Economic Rights Action Center in Lagos, told Alexis Okeowo, a reporter from the New Yorker.
For all this, there is one big concern. The movie Field Of Dreams popularised the saying ‘If you build it; they will come’. But there are increasing developments around the world suggesting that isn’t always the case. China is building the largest megacity in the world and by linking up cities it hopes to connect 42 million people more effectively. But Chinese developers built a new complex in Ordos, Inner Mongolia, to house one million people; today the Kangbashi district remains mostly empty with only 20,000-30,000 inhabitants. The entire population has instead chosen to live down the road in neighbouring Dongsheng. The reasons? Initially the problem was high rental prices, but by the time the market for housing in Kangbashi collapsed it had garnered a reputation as a lost cause. Nobody wants to live there.
But given the choice between the slums of today and the gleaming cities of the future, it’s far better to dream of cities that take the best new ideas and make them a reality. And if that happens anywhere, it’ll happen in Africa first.
You might also like:
http://innovation.uk.msn.com/tomorrow/building-megacities-could-africa-lead-the-way
2 Likes 1 Share |
agbameta: 1:28pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
Eko o ni baje o...
11 Likes |
reporter1: 1:50pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
Great news! Say what you may about Tinubu, he's no doubt a visionary.
Eko o ni baje o...
Waiting for bros unas "claimers" to say they own the place.
2 Likes |
SterlingTowers(m): 3:54pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
reporter?:
Great news! Say what you may about Tinubu, he's no doubt a visionary.
Eko o ni baje o...
Waiting for bros unas "claimers" to say they own the place.
Abeg don't indulge criminality. Call a spade a spade.
1 Like |
alaoeri: 4:27pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
Sterling Towers:
Abeg don't indulge criminality. Call a spade a spade.
If Tinubu is a criminal & yet deliver SW from the sham of PDP, & SW is experiencing infrastructural development more than other regions in the country don't u think its better to have that criminal as a leader than to have the bunch of cluelessness & confused leaders in PDP.
13 Likes |
gtrust: 4:31pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
I am not from Lagos state and I wanted to invest in this project.
I am afraid to invest because they will deport me or my loved ones!
If I invest $250,000 US Dollars in USA, my family and myself will get GREEN CARD (for life).
Lagos will delay my C of O & WE could even be deported while waiting for it.
I am really afraid
12 Likes |
bloggernaija: 4:38pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
alaoeri:
If Tinubu is a criminal & yet deliver SW from the sham of PDP, & SW is experiencing infrastructural development more than other regions in the country don't u think its better to have that criminal as a leader than to have the bunch of cluelessness & confused leaders in PDP.
They called obafemi awolowo worse
But their fathers were educated and babysitted in the institutions in created.
Why should you listen to people who cannot even choose their own leaders not to talk of even electing a good one.
12 Likes |
mayorall(m): 4:45pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
alaoeri:
If Tinubu is a criminal & yet deliver SW from the sham of PDP, & SW is experiencing infrastructural development more than other regions in the country don't u think its better to have that criminal as a leader than to have the bunch of cluelessness & confused leaders in PDP.
We love the kind of criminal he is. So a criminal can be the south west messiah, Tinubu the criminal delivered us from the hands of carnivous.
Eko oni baje
Oyo oni baje
Ogun oni baje
Ekiti oni baje
Osun oni baje, e don dey dara.
Odua a gbe south west o.
REP ipinle omoluabi.
17 Likes |
AkamuandStew: 5:11pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
May God Bless Tinubu.
He's the kind of thief we need at this stage of our history..
6 Likes |
obainojazz(m): 5:46pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
*faints*now that is beautiful
|
T8ksy(m): 6:20pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
bloggernaija:
They called obafemi awolowo worse
But their fathers were educated and babysitted in the institutions in created.
Yes o, their fathers and grandfathers all rushed down to western nigeria to partake in the free education Awo created in his area of jurisdiction. Something that their own leaders could not provide for them in their own region.
8 Likes |
yarodin: 6:37pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
T8ksy:
Yes o, their fathers and grandfathers all rushed down to western nigeria to partake in the free education Awo created in his area of jurisdiction. Something that their own leaders could not provide for them in their own region.
Eko Atlantic for all, "one nejiria".
2 Likes |
Yamamoto: 6:49pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
yarodin:
Eko Atlantic for all, "one nejiria".
You leeching urchins just love FREE things! Yet you claim you are the most hardworking Japanese and Jews in Nigeria??! Go and develop your land o ye thievers of other Nigerians!
13 Likes |
Rhino5dm: 8:26pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
. Yamamoto:
You leeching urchins just love FREE things! Yet you claim you are the most hardworking Japanese and Jews in Nigeria??! Go and develop your land o ye thievers of other Nigerians!
The Yoruba ingenuity. God bless Tinubu and Fashola.
6 Likes |
yarodin: 8:47pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
. Yamamoto:
You leeching urchins just love FREE things! Yet you claim you are the most hardworking Japanese and Jews in Nigeria??! Go and develop your land o ye thievers of other Nigerians!
Free? When did yorubas start giving out free things? Yeah you and your lazy people are dashing Igbos land, money left and right, abeg park well and watch us dominant you lazy cowards. "ONE NEJIRIA, ONE LAGOS, EKO NI BAJON FOR ALL".
7 Likes |
yarodin: 8:49pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
Rhino.5dm:
The Yoruba ingenuity. God bless Tinubu and Fashola.
And also the countless non Yorubas that have contributed to the development of Lagos. EKO NI BAJON for all, "ONE NEJIRIA".
5 Likes |
Rhino5dm: 9:28pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
|
Kairoseki77: 9:45pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
. Yamamoto:
You leeching urchins just love FREE things! Yet you claim you are the most hardworking Japanese and Jews in Nigeria??! Go and develop your land o ye thievers of other Nigerians!
Hahahahahahahaha! I laugh in Yoruba.
2 Likes |
Krasid(m): 10:45pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
I am tired of seeing prototype's of the city.When are we going to start seeing the real thing?
2 Likes |
agbameta: 11:02pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
Krasid: I am tired of seeing prototype's of the city.When are we going to start seeing the real thing?
The first skyscraper is under construction and the main Boulevard is also under construction..
Pay more attention to current affairs..
3 Likes |
Krasid(m): 11:10pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
agbameta:
The first skyscraper is under construction and the main Boulevard is also under construction..
Pay more attention to current affairs..
I know.The question I am asking is, When will the whole Eko Atlantic City Project be fully completed.
1 Like |
agbameta: 11:19pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
Krasid: I know.The question I am asking is, When will the whole Eko Atlantic City Project be fully completed.
I don't know and I don't think the developers sef sabi. Rome wasn't built in a day..
2 Likes |
Brimmie(m): 2:17am On Sep 07, 2013 |
Eko Atlantic, The Future!!!
Awolowo Is Gon' Be Proud Of The Likes Of Fashola, Aregbeshola, Amosun, N Jagaban Himself Tinubu!!
Eko O Ni Baje Ooo!!
BTW Dat Albino Morafucker Banned Me Cos END TIME IS NEAR
5 Likes |
Jayses(m): 9:09am On Sep 07, 2013 |
Ok ooo , i don hear , city of the future plus end time tinz
|
telexfree1: 9:10am On Sep 07, 2013 |
Federal Republic of Lagos tinz..
|
Jayses(m): 9:11am On Sep 07, 2013 |
K
|
|
|
ichommy(m): 9:20am On Sep 07, 2013 |
wow Good
|
rozayx5(m): 9:20am On Sep 07, 2013 |
i can see the place has already been flooded with Tinubu Azz lickers as expected 
Tinubu is your messiah, yet he went abroad for his surgery 
is there no hospital he built in his 8 years of office that could treat him in Lagos 
Hypocrites
9 Likes |
shaneroberts26: 9:20am On Sep 07, 2013 |
reporter?:
Great news! Say what you may about Tinubu, he's no doubt a visionary.
Eko o ni baje o...
Waiting for bros unas "claimers" to say they own the place.
It is very clear dat you have chosen dis special moment to insult yourself in public.
2 Likes |
Lordave: 9:21am On Sep 07, 2013 |
bloggernaija:
They called obafemi awolowo worse
But their fathers were educated and babysitted in the institutions in created.
Why should you listen to people who cannot even choose their own leaders not to talk of even electing a good one.
what are you trying to say? Has anybody said anything about Awo or Tinubu here?
Why can't you tribalist just focus on the topic and stop burning cowardly for a tribal war?
Nawa to you guys o, bitterness and hatred can never do you good.
1 Like |