2 Lessons From Makoko Floating School By Baba Oladeji

Makoko Floating School, a prototype floating structure, was designed by Nigerian architect, Kunlé Adeyemi of NLÉ Architects for the historic water community of Makoko, located on the lagoon heart of Nigeria’s largest city, Lagos.

Below are two lessons to be learnt from the Makoko Floating School.

Maintain the sense of place:

In a nation that loves erasures, tabula rasas, bans, scrap thats and demolitions, Kunle Adeyemi cleverly avoids that third world trap. There is evidence of maintaining collective psychological archetypes in the use of familiar timber and skill set, keeping the views to the third mainland bridge and perpetuating the amphibious lifestyle of the inhabitants.

Rather than erase these subtle elements in the style of Nigerian governments, the essential makeup of Makoko is kept intact within the flux of urban change in Lagos.

MFS Views to 3MB

Typology As Tactic:

Second is a tactical deployment of building typology. Since the plan was to become a floating community, the decision to start with a school is a big sign. To my mind the architect is attempting to train the future: the children of Makoko, building the future minds of the community, their skill set and imagination to see possibilities in the amphibious nature of Makoko.

The school is, therefore, a nod to a future community that can be sustained by the trained. It is almost like the Biblical account of creation where God first creates light. As light enabled the creation of other things, so does the choice of a school to kickstart the regeneration of this community enable the trained to sustain a culture of development.

One that trains them to see a possibility of a floating community. One that ensures the children who are part of the aforementioned ‘familiar skillset’ can continue the work of Adeyemi. One that makes them proud, possibly, to live in houses there and ultimately become intellectual bulwarks against future demolitions.

In short, while the architecture builds both the mind and body of Makoko, it also jumpstarts cultural reproduction in the district.

NLE Water Community

Bio:
Baba Oladeji is an architect and Partner at Design Party. He was recently recognised by the Condé Nast-published Baku magazine as one of the “5 Nigerian architects you should know”.

PMNews

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