The Minister for Works and Housing Francis Asenso-Boakye has tasked the country’s engineers to come up with innovative technologies that would see to the production of cost-effective building materials to support the government’s priority of heavily subsidizing the provision of housing units to the citizenry.
With rising cost of building materials posing significant practical challenges to the achievement of government’s Affordable Housing Strategies, the Sector Minister believes, such a move would go a long way to reduce the overall cost of safe, decent, and secured housing units for the low to middle earning Ghanaians, while boosting the local economy.
Speaking at the 2022 Ghana Institution of Engineering (GhIE) Annual Conference and General Meeting today in Accra, Asenso-Boakye said the sharp increases in the cost of building materials due to distortions in global economy should presents an enormous opportunity for Ghana institution of Engineers and other professional bodies to develop sustainable homegrown solutions that will boost the building and construction sector and subsequently impact our national affordable housing agenda.
Government has recently initiated move to commence a new affordable housing programme that seeks to provide safe, decent, and secure accommodation for the low to middle earning Ghanaians, by making available free unencumbered land, infrastructure, and tax incentives with the view to attracting private sector investments into the affordable housing space. This strategy will ultimately cut the cost of owning a housing unit by up to 40%.
The Works and Housing Minister therefore implored on GhIE to look deeper and wider for engineering approaches that can churn-out creative ideas and attractive designs using local building materials that meet best practices.
Asenso-Boakye said the use of local building materials such as burnt bricks & tiles, pozzolana cement, compressed earth blocks (CEB), bamboo, plastics, and others can be the catalyst to help build public interest and enhance the use of local materials in the building and construction industry and ultimately reduce the cost of building.
“It is important for the GhIE, to understand that engineering and other related disciplines, can influence policy actions, and subsequently, generate methodologies for implementing initiatives aimed at achieving efficiency, increased affordability and structural integrity of housing construction and infrastructure in the country.” The Minister added.
The President of GhIE, Eng. Prof Rev. Charles Anum Adams commended government for the various infrastructural development undertaken in the country and called for a more collaboration between the engineering body and the government to further drive the country’s structural growth.
Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana
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The government should lead the way. The talk is nice but action is needed. It is in the interest of the government to have workers who are living comfortably so that they can be productive. People who have to worry about rent & affordable available accomodation cannot be expected to work at their best quality. To this end, it is important that the government looks at how to help engineers in Ghana to provide & produce substitutes to imported building materials & labor saving tools & equipment that are locally available so that housing costs can be reduced with the local substitute. Institutions such as CSIR, Building And Road Research Institute (BRRI) should have branches & outreaches in ALL REGIONAL tertiary educational centers to share ideas & try innovations. A material that could make construction cheaper in one region may not be so in another so the economic dynamics must be considered to make it easier to distribute & promote what works best in each locality. The government should encourage and promote these endeavors.