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Today, the musty building holds moldering books and darkened offices where Nigeria's colonial rulers once worked. Nearby, the island's iconic 25-story Independence House, a gift from the British to Nigeria ahead of its independence in 1960, sits empty as well. The black-glassed Savannah Bank building, which was to be the home of the financial firm before it failed in 2002, has no tenants. And the island's tallest building, the 32-story NITEL building, is named after the country's collapsed state-run telephone company. Politics and governance plays a large part in the architectural slump. Nigeria moved its federal capital from Lagos to Abuja, a newly built city near the country's center, in the 1990s. There, new freeways and massive government buildings rise out of the red-dirt clay of the city, an almost sterile city-in-a-box for a nation used to erratic building and little regulation. There are some efforts now at preserving that heritage, with a few buildings on Lagos Island recently restored, as well as an 1898 building at the nearby Nigerian Railway Corp. compound. While the old Broad Street Prison was torn down, Lagos state recently opened Freedom Park there, with neatly manicured grass, performance space and exhibits noting the site's history. For John Godwin, an architect who arrived in Nigeria in 1954 from Britain and later became a citizen, Lagos Island is both his home and a bittersweet sight. Godwin spent his career designing some of the country's most iconic buildings with his wife, later serving as a professor at the University of Lagos. He restored the old railway compound house and works on preservation issues with Legacy. "You have to say that in many areas of Lagos, those building bylaws have been totally ignored," Godwin told The Associated Press in a recent interview. "I think it is making it very difficult for people to live here, I really do. And I think as much as they know that, Lagos is like a drug." Godwin paused at one moment to collect himself while thinking about his 58 years in the country. "You get emotional about it," he said, tearing up. "It's a mess. But under that mess, there are a whole lot of very good people."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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