Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in Lagos

With an over 20-fold increase in population between 1963 and today, Lagos has expanded significantly both within and outside its city administrative boundaries. Some paradoxes are identified using mixed methodologies from a qualitative research design. Lagos’s northwards expansion has exerted severa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Basirat Oyalowo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2022-09-01
Series:Buildings & Cities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal-buildingscities.org/articles/243
_version_ 1797759567762817024
author Basirat Oyalowo
author_facet Basirat Oyalowo
author_sort Basirat Oyalowo
collection DOAJ
description With an over 20-fold increase in population between 1963 and today, Lagos has expanded significantly both within and outside its city administrative boundaries. Some paradoxes are identified using mixed methodologies from a qualitative research design. Lagos’s northwards expansion has exerted several externalities on a neighbouring state. Expansion within Lagos, on its coastal south-eastern axis, is defined by real estate activities of a different nature. In both cases, new settlements have emerged with differing social and economic characteristics that have far-reaching impact for housing accessibility and affordability. These differences are explored by establishing pull-factors responsible for attracting specific income groups to each axis, the impact of government action (and inaction), and the implications of these for city growth and management. Formal mechanisms of planning lead to a proliferation of higher end real estate development. This has created unequal access to land and housing for lower income families. The subsequent exclusion of lower income families from planned areas represents a failure of the market system. Lagos presents compelling complexities of the management of urban expansion that spread beyond administrative boundaries, as well as the influence of planning to achieve economic development. 'Policy relevance' City managers and policymakers need to plan for expansion in fast growing cities. Urban expansion will flow with the demand for (and availability of) space and will not respect administrative boundaries. Urban containment policies are not known to have a high level of success in African cities, especially in contexts where planning enforcement is weak. Thus, city managers and policymakers must recognise the positive externalities of urban expansion on their cities and provide resources towards optimising this for the common good. They must also take actions towards monitoring and addressing negative externalities from the expansion of neighbouring cities, especially where planning jurisdictions differ. In both cases, government action is required to ensure that resulting housing and real estate markets work for all income classes.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T18:46:17Z
format Article
id doaj.art-01caeb4f16dc4bf79e6fe8262d399763
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2632-6655
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T18:46:17Z
publishDate 2022-09-01
publisher Ubiquity Press
record_format Article
series Buildings & Cities
spelling doaj.art-01caeb4f16dc4bf79e6fe8262d3997632023-08-02T07:37:19ZengUbiquity PressBuildings & Cities2632-66552022-09-013110.5334/bc.243142Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in LagosBasirat Oyalowo0Department of Estate Management, University of Lagos, Lagos; Centre for Housing and Sustainable Development, University of Lagos, LagosWith an over 20-fold increase in population between 1963 and today, Lagos has expanded significantly both within and outside its city administrative boundaries. Some paradoxes are identified using mixed methodologies from a qualitative research design. Lagos’s northwards expansion has exerted several externalities on a neighbouring state. Expansion within Lagos, on its coastal south-eastern axis, is defined by real estate activities of a different nature. In both cases, new settlements have emerged with differing social and economic characteristics that have far-reaching impact for housing accessibility and affordability. These differences are explored by establishing pull-factors responsible for attracting specific income groups to each axis, the impact of government action (and inaction), and the implications of these for city growth and management. Formal mechanisms of planning lead to a proliferation of higher end real estate development. This has created unequal access to land and housing for lower income families. The subsequent exclusion of lower income families from planned areas represents a failure of the market system. Lagos presents compelling complexities of the management of urban expansion that spread beyond administrative boundaries, as well as the influence of planning to achieve economic development. 'Policy relevance' City managers and policymakers need to plan for expansion in fast growing cities. Urban expansion will flow with the demand for (and availability of) space and will not respect administrative boundaries. Urban containment policies are not known to have a high level of success in African cities, especially in contexts where planning enforcement is weak. Thus, city managers and policymakers must recognise the positive externalities of urban expansion on their cities and provide resources towards optimising this for the common good. They must also take actions towards monitoring and addressing negative externalities from the expansion of neighbouring cities, especially where planning jurisdictions differ. In both cases, government action is required to ensure that resulting housing and real estate markets work for all income classes.https://journal-buildingscities.org/articles/243equityland usemaster planperi-urbanplanningurban expansionlagosnigeria
spellingShingle Basirat Oyalowo
Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in Lagos
Buildings & Cities
equity
land use
master plan
peri-urban
planning
urban expansion
lagos
nigeria
title Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in Lagos
title_full Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in Lagos
title_fullStr Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in Lagos
title_full_unstemmed Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in Lagos
title_short Implications of urban expansion: land, planning and housing in Lagos
title_sort implications of urban expansion land planning and housing in lagos
topic equity
land use
master plan
peri-urban
planning
urban expansion
lagos
nigeria
url https://journal-buildingscities.org/articles/243
work_keys_str_mv AT basiratoyalowo implicationsofurbanexpansionlandplanningandhousinginlagos