[Premium Times] The buildings collapsed as a result of ageing and poor maintenance on the part of the owners, officials say.
[Vanguard] ·One lands in hospital, others escape as 4 and 2-storey buildings collapse in Lagos
[Daily Trust] At least 500 residents of a building in the Ketu area of Lagos State escaped when their the one-storey building collapsed on Sunday.
[The Conversation Africa] The 6.9 magnitude earthquake that hit Morocco on Friday, September 8 has claimed almost 3,000 lives. A further 5,530 people are injured, and the death toll is expected to rise.
[The Conversation Africa] More than 11,000 people have been killed and tens of thousands are missing following the catastrophic dam collapse in the eastern Libyan city of Derna on 12 September. The dam collapse came after an extreme storm, Storm Daniel, slammed into the north African country. The Conversation Africa's Moina Spooner asked water resources and engineering expert Nadhir Al-Ansari, who has researched the design and safety of dams, to provide insights into the disaster.
[Vanguard] Asaba -- A section of a storey building, currently under construction in Asaba, Delta State, yesterday, collapsed, leaving about eight persons injured.
[Ghanaian Times] A GH¢ 260 million 16-storey ultra-modern Wesley Towers conference office complex for the Methodist Church, Ghana was yesterday inaugurated and dedicated by the Presiding Bishop, Most Rev. Dr Paul K. Boafo in Accra.
[IPS] United Nations -- The building sector may be overdue for a significant overhaul of the processes in which infrastructure is built to be more environmentally conscious and reduce carbon emissions, a new UN report reveals.
[Ghanaian Times] The third edition of the Africa Real Estate Conference and Expo has been launched in Accra with the commitment to create the needed platform for estate developers to explore the future of real estate in Africa.
[Ghanaian Times] Amasaman -- Reconstruction of the $346.5 million Ofankor-Nsawam dual carriageway project is progressing steadily with 40 per cent of work completed so far, the resident engineer, Mr Thomas David Arthur, has disclosed.