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Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? - Properties (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPropertiesIs It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? (35203 Views)

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Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by femi4: 11:46pm On Feb 09
kpankpangolo:
Space booked.

xxxx xxxxx xxxx

I wonder why Nigerians abroad always swear to never return. If you don’t live in an American state located in the south, cold must pursue you back. The time overseas tires people is in old age when children are already adults with no idea of their fatherland. That is when regret sets in. Many use their pensions to build Nigerian mansions set for their return. It’s best to build the abode while strong just in case.
You can only achieve this from abroad

35yrs of working in Nigeria is sufferring
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by kullozone(m): 11:56pm On Feb 09
Wow I remember this Moniker from some time back... You used to be very troublesome but I never thought you had something good offline grin

I'm very impressed. Make sure you have adequate provision for security too.

Congratulations to you
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by NothingDoMe: 12:05am On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
I came up with a plan.
I had to pay my siblings N20m to give me the property.👍🏽 I did not want any wahala in the future amongst us. We came to an agreement. Now, the property is solely mine.✅
Well done. Truly this is more than "extra"
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Osax0(m): 12:26am On Feb 10
Yes maybe no
Kanwulia:
Your experiences? I have gone through safia pains.
Nigerian contractors are HIGHLY CRIMINAL!😱
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by doliphils(m): 1:15am On Feb 10
I love the work you have done so far but let me give my two cents.

I would advise relocate the grave to a proper burial ground and either two things convert the house to an hotel or to a student/nysc lodge with high security and scrutiny.

Happy to talk more in details.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by doliphils(m): 1:16am On Feb 10
In the long run, you and your siblings want income especially if you are not interested in relocating to the village or visiting quite often.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by louqas: 4:32am On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
What do we do with the grave?🤷🏾‍♀️
Many city people simply relocate the grave back to their village so the property can be sold
But since this is in the village, e go hard to sell, except you cut out the part with the grave and sell the remaining empty land
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Kanwulia(op): 4:41am On Feb 10
AllLovingGod:
How can you do this heavy nice project without digging a proper borehole? It wouldn't cost more than 2M.

Relying on well water, as in well water? in this age and time to water the building is mind boggling to me oo.

Please kindly dig a proper borehole for your peace of mind. Congrats.
Thanks.🙏🏾

I thought the same thing o. Till I was advised against it due to the topographical concerns of the area. Erosion and landslide issues. It is not everywhere you can sink a borehole. Too many boreholes in one area can be a potential threat to the environment. Your whole septic system might just collapse. Besides, the well is more natural and eco-friendly.

I always get advice from engineers in the area before I do anything. Just my “yankee mind” at work. wink You know Nigerians love to do anything anyhow. My mind does not work like that. You can make may costly mistakes.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by mirrael68(m): 4:42am On Feb 10
kpankpangolo:
Space booked.

xxxx xxxxx xxxx

I wonder why Nigerians abroad always swear to never return. If you don’t live in an American state located in the south, cold must pursue you back. The time overseas tires people is in old age when children are already adults with no idea of their fatherland. That is when regret sets in. Many use their pensions to build Nigerian mansions set for their return. It’s best to build the abode while strong just in case.
To everyone his own. How cold wan take drive you back home come face underdevelopment here that you are not used to?
Nowhere on earth is problem free. You choose the ones you can bear consciously or unconsciously.
Me I prefer that cold. Btw I ve experienced snow storms in NY !
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by CaptainGo: 4:46am On Feb 10
anonimi:
If you have tenants that means the house is not in the village but in a small town, right?

Why have we allowed ourselves to be so focused on roads and bridges as democracy dividends, that our state governments no longer employ workers to make water available to all buildings?

What then is the point of saying we are modern people living in the 21st century, when we are clearly not huh
Bro, for once, just enjoy the thread without complaining. Abi, dem swear for you? undecided
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by obalola007(m): 5:37am On Feb 10
His siblings will later frustrate his life in the future...write today's date down
Kobicove:
This one na story, you just used your money to do bazaar for them.

In Igboland one sibling cannot claim sole ownership of family house that was build on ancestral land in the village!⁰
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by descarado: 6:00am On Feb 10
Capernum:
The question is, will the stress worth it at the end of the day? What happens to the house after you die? Will one of your children also buy and renovate it too? I would have preferred all of you sold the house and share the money.

Are the village people fine with you? Are you fine with them?
Just the joy alone.

I agree children do not care.
We built all our nigerian houses in form of rented properties inside. My father in law started this and his kids keyed in. Our luck, we came from the city so tenants occupy the houses.

Houses are kept up to date. Anytime I am ready to retire, one good bungalow with lots of land for agriculture, I am good. My kids are definitely not coming back to live there and at a stage in my life, I will not climb the stairs again. I will rather use that money and extend the compound for my farm animals, fruits and veggies. Good for the body.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by descarado: 6:01am On Feb 10
CaptainGo:
Bro, for once, just enjoy the thread without complaining. Abi, dem swear for you? undecided
He is always complaining in every thread. This is not politics.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by anonimi: 6:11am On Feb 10
CaptainGo:
Bro, for once, just enjoy the thread without complaining.

Abi, dem swear for you? undecided
Don’t mind me jare, Oga captain go.

Do you think that Lugard is the one who swore for us? That useless British man who amalgamated northern and southern Nigeria 112 years ago.

Any idea why we are now doing japa to his neocolonial country, to increase the development gap between them and us? Something that Qataris and Emiratis are not doing, even though their countries were equally put together by Britain, and they didn’t get independence until 1971.

Do you know why these Asians (including Arabs) have made so much progress but we have failed to achieve much in over six decades of running our own countries in Africa huh


sage:
http://www.leadershipnigeria.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=28:the-vague-future-of-nigeria&catid=28:friday-column&Itemid=56

Lord Lugard, the former governor-general of Nigeria, in 1926, wrote his unfiltered thought about Nigerians. From his book, The Dual Mandates, come these excerpts: "In character and temperament, the typical African of this race-type is a happy, thriftless, excitable person, lacking in self-control, discipline, and foresight. Naturally courageous, and naturally courteous and polite, full of personal vanity, with little sense of veracity, fond of music and loving weapons as an oriental loves jewellery. His thoughts are concentrated on the events and feelings of the moment, and he suffers little from the apprehension for the future or grief for the past. His mind is far nearer to the animal world than that of the European or Asiatic, and exhibits something of the animals' placidity and want of desire to rise beyond the state he has reached.

"Through the ages, the African appears to have evolved no organised religious creed, and though some tribes appear to believe in a deity, the religious sense seldom rises above pantheistic animalism and seems more often to take the form of a vague dread of the supernatural. He lacks the power of organisation, and is conspicuously deficient in the management and control alike of men or business. He loves the display of power, but fails to realize its responsibility - he will work hard with a less incentive than most races. He has the courage of the fighting animal, an instinct rather than a moral virtue. In brief, the virtues and defects of his race -type are those of attractive children, whose confidence when it is won is given ungrudgingly as to an older and wiser superior and without envy. Perhaps, the two traits which have impressed me as those most characteristic of the African native are his lack of apprehension and his lack of ability to visualize the future"

Guys lets discuss the thoughts of Lord Lugard. he had  a supremacist view obviously. But is he right in the way he describes Nigerians and Africans in general? How many of the issues that he raises are valid?

Letz get some responses
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by descarado: 6:13am On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
Thanks.🙏🏾

I thought the same thing o. Till I was advised against it due to the topographical concerns of the area. Erosion and landslide issues. It is not everywhere you can sink a borehole. Too many boreholes in one area can be a potential threat to the environment. Your whole septic system might just collapse. Besides, the well is more natural and eco-friendly.

I always get advice from engineers in the area before I do anything. Just my “yankee mind” at work. wink You know Nigerians love to do anything anyhow. My mind does not work like that. You can make may costly mistakes.
Kanwulia, you do well o. Look at how the house turned out.
Keep some area for gardening. I love me some small farm work.
Well done.

If the land is so big, you can build something and put tenant in so the house can be lively.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by skuribeebo: 6:14am On Feb 10
Your siblings are coming back for you.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Midex88(m): 7:44am On Feb 10
HacheNoire:
The problem with this village homes is that, when people are not active inside a house, it starts to deteriorate.

I don’t know the law or explanation about it. But leave a house for one year and things just falling apart automatically.
This is true and it has solid explanations in building science, materials behavior, and maintenance dynamics.
houses are designed to be lived in. When they aren’t, small protective processes stop, and deterioration accelerates.

Here’s why

1. Moisture is no longer controlled
Humans unintentionally manage moisture in a house.

When a house is occupied:
• Heating and cooking dry the air
• Windows get opened occasionally
• Bathrooms and kitchens get used (and ventilated)
• Small leaks are noticed early

When a house is empty:
• Humidity builds up
• Condensation forms on walls, ceilings, and pipes
• Mould, mildew, and rot start developing
• Wood swells, warps, or decays
• Metal parts corrode

Moisture is the number one enemy of buildings.


2. Temperature swings stress materials because Occupied homes have relatively stable temperatures.

Empty homes:
• Get very cold at night and very hot during the day
• Experience repeated expansion and contraction

This causes:
• Cracks in walls and ceilings
• Tile grout failure
• Paint peeling
• Sealants drying and splitting

Over time, these micro-failures add up.


3. Plumbing systems degrade when unused as Water systems are meant to move.

When water sits:
• Sediment settles in pipes
• Seals dry out
• Traps evaporate, letting sewer gases in
• Rubber components harden and crack

You often don’t notice until water is turned back on—and then leaks appear everywhere.


4. Electrical and mechanical systems stagnate

Unused systems fail faster than lightly used ones.

Examples:
• Contacts corrode
• Circuit breakers stiffen
• Fans seize
• Pumps fail due to inactivity

Regular use actually keeps these systems healthy.


5. Pests take over
Humans deter pests just by being present.

An empty house:
• Attracts rodents, termites, ants, and insects
• Becomes nesting ground for birds or bats
• Suffers unseen damage to wiring, insulation, and wood

Once pests settle, damage accelerates rapidly.


6. Small problems go unnoticed and become big ones
This is critical.

In an occupied house:
• A small leak is fixed
• A crack is sealed
• A blocked drain is cleared

In an empty house:
• A minor issue can run for months
• Water damage spreads
• Structural elements weaken
Buildings don’t usually “collapse suddenly”—they decay quietly.

7. Houses are systems, not static objects
A house is like a living system:
• It “breathes”
• It responds to use
• It relies on feedback (human attention). Remove the feedback loop, and entropy takes over.

This is why people say:
“A house that isn’t lived in starts to die.”
It’s not mystical—it’s physics, chemistry, biology, and neglect combined.


In summary

A house deteriorates when empty because:
• Moisture accumulates
• Temperature fluctuates
• Systems dry out or corrode
• Pests invade
• Minor issues become major damage

Human presence acts as maintenance.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Meteng: 8:25am On Feb 10
Midex88:
This is true and it has solid explanations in building science, materials behavior, and maintenance dynamics.
houses are designed to be lived in. When they aren’t, small protective processes stop, and deterioration accelerates.

Here’s why

1. Moisture is no longer controlled
Humans unintentionally manage moisture in a house.

When a house is occupied:
• Heating and cooking dry the air
• Windows get opened occasionally
• Bathrooms and kitchens get used (and ventilated)
• Small leaks are noticed early

When a house is empty:
• Humidity builds up
• Condensation forms on walls, ceilings, and pipes
• Mould, mildew, and rot start developing
• Wood swells, warps, or decays
• Metal parts corrode

Moisture is the number one enemy of buildings.


2. Temperature swings stress materials because Occupied homes have relatively stable temperatures.

Empty homes:
• Get very cold at night and very hot during the day
• Experience repeated expansion and contraction

This causes:
• Cracks in walls and ceilings
• Tile grout failure
• Paint peeling
• Sealants drying and splitting

Over time, these micro-failures add up.


3. Plumbing systems degrade when unused as Water systems are meant to move.

When water sits:
• Sediment settles in pipes
• Seals dry out
• Traps evaporate, letting sewer gases in
• Rubber components harden and crack

You often don’t notice until water is turned back on—and then leaks appear everywhere.


4. Electrical and mechanical systems stagnate

Unused systems fail faster than lightly used ones.

Examples:
• Contacts corrode
• Circuit breakers stiffen
• Fans seize
• Pumps fail due to inactivity

Regular use actually keeps these systems healthy.


5. Pests take over
Humans deter pests just by being present.

An empty house:
• Attracts rodents, termites, ants, and insects
• Becomes nesting ground for birds or bats
• Suffers unseen damage to wiring, insulation, and wood

Once pests settle, damage accelerates rapidly.


6. Small problems go unnoticed and become big ones
This is critical.

In an occupied house:
• A small leak is fixed
• A crack is sealed
• A blocked drain is cleared

In an empty house:
• A minor issue can run for months
• Water damage spreads
• Structural elements weaken
Buildings don’t usually “collapse suddenly”—they decay quietly.

7. Houses are systems, not static objects
A house is like a living system:
• It “breathes”
• It responds to use
• It relies on feedback (human attention). Remove the feedback loop, and entropy takes over.

This is why people say:
“A house that isn’t lived in starts to die.”
It’s not mystical—it’s physics, chemistry, biology, and neglect combined.


In summary

A house deteriorates when empty because:
• Moisture accumulates
• Temperature fluctuates
• Systems dry out or corrode
• Pests invade
• Minor issues become major damage

Human presence acts as maintenance.
Thank you for this. It really made sense to me
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by meobizy(m): 8:31am On Feb 10
I like how the front page title was labeled “his.” I guess Nairaland knows f accounts here are males in disguise.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by nnamokenna(m): 8:52am On Feb 10
Kobicove:
In Igboland one sibling cannot claim sole ownership of family house that was build on ancestral land in the village!⁰
Not in all Igbo communities. In my community, the first-born male inherits the land (and is not expected to leave it) while all the other male children have to leave and get their own lands. The good thing is that we do not sale lands in my community. The community gives you a land for building your home once you apply and pay all your outstanding dues/debts owed the community. The land is usually large - 200 by 200 feet. Although it was recently reduced to 150 by 150 feet.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by kpankpangolo: 9:05am On Feb 10
Zero topics. You and Yarimo na the same.

mirrael68:
To everyone his own. How cold wan take drive you back home come face underdevelopment here that you are not used to?
Nowhere on earth is problem free. You choose the ones you can bear consciously or unconsciously.
Me I prefer that cold. Btw I ve experienced snow storms in NY !
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by kpankpangolo: 9:07am On Feb 10
That’s the point of money; create the amenities for yourself. If OP digs a borehole in that compound, everything is set for a comfortable life.

ednut1:
what exactly will you be doing living in a village that lacks basic amenities and infrastructure at old age?.

Search for this story on TikTok. Her father went back to the village and was neglected/almost dead
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by stuffs2002: 9:33am On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
Your experiences? I have gone through safia pains.
Nigerian contractors are HIGHLY CRIMINAL!😱
As a COREN and international registered engineer, I will tell you that you are your own biggest problem.

Why didn't you get qualified people to work with your brother and cousin but you opted to work with village people who will give you village standards
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by stuffs2002: 9:44am On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
Thanks.🙏🏾

I thought the same thing o. Till I was advised against it due to the topographical concerns of the area. Erosion and landslide issues. It is not everywhere you can sink a borehole. Too many boreholes in one area can be a potential threat to the environment. Your whole septic system might just collapse. Besides, the well is more natural and eco-friendly.

I always get advice from engineers in the area before I do anything. Just my “yankee mind” at work. wink You know Nigerians love to do anything anyhow. My mind does not work like that. You can make may costly mistakes.
Are you sure those your village "engineers" are not leading you I to the bush?

I have a bachelors degree and two masters in engineering with years of experience in engineering and I am laughing at you over this post.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by HacheNoire: 10:43am On Feb 10
Midex88:
This is true and it has solid explanations in building science, materials behavior, and maintenance dynamics.
houses are designed to be lived in. When they aren’t, small protective processes stop, and deterioration accelerates.

Here’s why

1. Moisture is no longer controlled
Humans unintentionally manage moisture in a house.

When a house is occupied:
• Heating and cooking dry the air
• Windows get opened occasionally
• Bathrooms and kitchens get used (and ventilated)
• Small leaks are noticed early

When a house is empty:
• Humidity builds up
• Condensation forms on walls, ceilings, and pipes
• Mould, mildew, and rot start developing
• Wood swells, warps, or decays
• Metal parts corrode

Moisture is the number one enemy of buildings.


2. Temperature swings stress materials because Occupied homes have relatively stable temperatures.

Empty homes:
• Get very cold at night and very hot during the day
• Experience repeated expansion and contraction

This causes:
• Cracks in walls and ceilings
• Tile grout failure
• Paint peeling
• Sealants drying and splitting

Over time, these micro-failures add up.


3. Plumbing systems degrade when unused as Water systems are meant to move.

When water sits:
• Sediment settles in pipes
• Seals dry out
• Traps evaporate, letting sewer gases in
• Rubber components harden and crack

You often don’t notice until water is turned back on—and then leaks appear everywhere.


4. Electrical and mechanical systems stagnate

Unused systems fail faster than lightly used ones.

Examples:
• Contacts corrode
• Circuit breakers stiffen
• Fans seize
• Pumps fail due to inactivity

Regular use actually keeps these systems healthy.


5. Pests take over
Humans deter pests just by being present.

An empty house:
• Attracts rodents, termites, ants, and insects
• Becomes nesting ground for birds or bats
• Suffers unseen damage to wiring, insulation, and wood

Once pests settle, damage accelerates rapidly.


6. Small problems go unnoticed and become big ones
This is critical.

In an occupied house:
• A small leak is fixed
• A crack is sealed
• A blocked drain is cleared

In an empty house:
• A minor issue can run for months
• Water damage spreads
• Structural elements weaken
Buildings don’t usually “collapse suddenly”—they decay quietly.

7. Houses are systems, not static objects
A house is like a living system:
• It “breathes”
• It responds to use
• It relies on feedback (human attention). Remove the feedback loop, and entropy takes over.

This is why people say:
“A house that isn’t lived in starts to die.”
It’s not mystical—it’s physics, chemistry, biology, and neglect combined.


In summary

A house deteriorates when empty because:
• Moisture accumulates
• Temperature fluctuates
• Systems dry out or corrode
• Pests invade
• Minor issues become major damage

Human presence acts as maintenance.
Your explanation is very logical. Thanks!
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Omayie:
Kanwulia:
I came up with a plan.
I had to pay my siblings N20m to give me the property.👍🏽 I did not want any wahala in the future amongst us. We came to an agreement. Now, the property is solely mine.✅
cool
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Omayie: 10:55am On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
I came up with a plan.
I had to pay my siblings N20m to give me the property.👍🏽 I did not want any wahala in the future amongst us. We came to an agreement. Now, the property is solely mine.✅
If you don’t have wayward siblings “pardon the words” , with good documentation and witnesses involving at least 4 of the below mentioned such as Elders Council, Village Traditional Ruler, Chiefs, Youth Leaders, Government Bodies amongst others you are goood on this. Other than the above mentioned you just did a Family Social Responsibility FSR
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by GeneralOuki: 2:25pm On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
Rule #1. NEVER ALLOW ANY CONTRACTOR TO BUY YOUR MATERIALS IF YOU CAN HELP IT.
Best piece of advice
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Gerrard59(m): 2:28pm On Feb 10
Kanwulia:
Your experiences? I have gone through safia pains.
Nigerian contractors are HIGHLY CRIMINAL!😱
Nigerians are largely very dishonest people, most especially the so-called construction workers/contractors. Some professions are highly prone to being filled with liars.
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by Samueltemi337(m): 3:40pm On Feb 10
jmoore:
Agreement is agreement.

REST
Nor mean say issue nor go dey later
Na Nigeria be this
Re: Is It Worth Renovating Your Village Home In Nigeria? by bikefab(m): 4:01pm On Feb 10
Nice work, DM for plants and grasses. It will make a more beautiful scenery
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Reply

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