In 2012, the star architect Kunlé Adeyemi unveiled his “floating school” in Makoko, one of more than 100 slums in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial capital. Most of Makoko’s residents, who are estimated between 40,000 and 300,000, live in makeshift structures built on stilts on lagoon water. The floating (...)
Site référencé: Afronline
Africa, Culture, Environment & Energy, Nigeria, Opinion, Architecture, Kunlé Adeyemi, Makoko, UN-HABITAT, water
Afronline
Adaptation Funding a Must for Africa
14/11/2016
What Trump means for Africa
11/11/2016
Zuma survives no-confidence vote
11/11/2016
Africa’s least loved leader marches on
11/11/2016
Trump’s isolationism : Threats and opportunities for Africa
11/11/2016
Will Free Expression Equal Terrorism in Zimbabwe ?
9/11/2016