At least 371 new hospitals, shopping malls, filling stations, and schools have secured permits to build and begin operations in Lagos, Nigeria’s economic and commercial capital.
Oluyinka Olumide, the Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, disclosed this during the 2025 ministerial press briefing held in Ikeja on Wednesday.
According to Olumide, the Lagos State Physical Planning Permit Authority (LASPPPA), in the last six years, granted a total of 37, 266 approvals for various uses – residential, commercial, mixed-use, and institutional, among others, adding that in 2024 alone, LASPPPA granted approvals for 95 hospitals, 27 petrol filling stations, 151 shopping malls, and 95 schools, among others.
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Olumide said that LASPPPA surpassed its pre-amnesty window record of 2,201 approvals by 6,655 as it granted a total of 8, 856 approvals between May and December 2024, while the amnesty window was on.
The commissioner, who is elated about the success of the Amnesty Programme, designed to allow owners and developers of existing buildings without approvals regularise their property, said that the Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s administration successfully encouraged more property owners to regularise their buildings as application and approval rate swelled during the amnesty window that lasted for 180 days.
“The amnesty window was divided into three phases, yielding impressive results: for the first phase (May-July 2024), LASPPPA granted 2,151 approvals; the second phase, (August-October 2024) witnessed a total of 6,402 applications out of which 3,570 approvals were granted; and the third phase (November-December 2024) recorded 7,210 applications and 3,135 approvals, bringing the total Amnesty Period achievements to 18,489 applications and 8,856 Approvals, respectively. ”
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He added that the two months that followed the amnesty window, that is, January and February 2025, recorded a combined 1,369 approvals against 2,084 applications.
He urged property owners and developers to always seek the planning information service of the ministry and guide against factors causing delays in approval, such as non-compliance with zoning regulations, exceeding permissible limits, and deviation from the master plan, among others.
