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Nigerian floating school collapses due to heavy rains seven months after opening | Nigerian floating school collapses due to heavy rains seven months after opening |
(3 months later) | |
A floating school built to withstand storms and floods at a lagoon in Nigeria’s commercial capital Lagos and educate children from a nearby slum has collapsed only seven months after its official opening. | A floating school built to withstand storms and floods at a lagoon in Nigeria’s commercial capital Lagos and educate children from a nearby slum has collapsed only seven months after its official opening. |
The aid-funded Makoko Floating School offered free education to children who lived in nearby huts on stilts. Most of their parents fish for a living and, like most of the megacity’s 23 million residents, lack a reliable electricity and water supply. | The aid-funded Makoko Floating School offered free education to children who lived in nearby huts on stilts. Most of their parents fish for a living and, like most of the megacity’s 23 million residents, lack a reliable electricity and water supply. |
Heavy rains brought down the pyramid-shaped wooden school, built on a platform held afloat by hundreds of plastic barrels, on Tuesday. None of its nearly 50 pupils were in the building when it collapsed, officials said. | Heavy rains brought down the pyramid-shaped wooden school, built on a platform held afloat by hundreds of plastic barrels, on Tuesday. None of its nearly 50 pupils were in the building when it collapsed, officials said. |
Classes had already been moved to another location in late March after heavy downpours at the start of the rainy season began to affect classes. | Classes had already been moved to another location in late March after heavy downpours at the start of the rainy season began to affect classes. |
“It is not only the floating school that collapsed. It collapsed many houses surrounding the floating school,” said David Shemede, Makoko resident and brother of the school’s director. | “It is not only the floating school that collapsed. It collapsed many houses surrounding the floating school,” said David Shemede, Makoko resident and brother of the school’s director. |
Building collapses are a common problem in the west African nation, sometimes due to the use of poor materials and weak enforcement of regulations. At least 30 people died when a building collapsed in an upmarket Lagos district in March. | Building collapses are a common problem in the west African nation, sometimes due to the use of poor materials and weak enforcement of regulations. At least 30 people died when a building collapsed in an upmarket Lagos district in March. |
The school was built to adapt to changing water levels and withstand the storms and floods that lash Lagos in the four-month-long rainy season. Its Nigerian architect Kunle Adeyemi said in a statement that the Makoko community was considering upgrading the structure and rebuilding an improved version of the school. | The school was built to adapt to changing water levels and withstand the storms and floods that lash Lagos in the four-month-long rainy season. Its Nigerian architect Kunle Adeyemi said in a statement that the Makoko community was considering upgrading the structure and rebuilding an improved version of the school. |
Makoko was established as a fishing village hundreds of years ago but climate change and rapid urbanisation are now threatening its way of life. | Makoko was established as a fishing village hundreds of years ago but climate change and rapid urbanisation are now threatening its way of life. |
The school was officially opened in November 2015 after being in use for more than a year beforehand. It took three years to build and catered to children coming from the only English-speaking school in the area. Pupils travelled to it by canoe. | The school was officially opened in November 2015 after being in use for more than a year beforehand. It took three years to build and catered to children coming from the only English-speaking school in the area. Pupils travelled to it by canoe. |
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