The government will give the Board of Registration of Architects
and Quantity Surveyors (BORAQS) land to set up a one stop shop for
pre-construction approvals.
Acting Lands and Housing
Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang'i says the ministry has earmarked two
parcels of land at Upper Hill and along Thika road, one of which will
host everyone involved in the construction process.
He
said once BORAQS sets up a 15 storey building it will host the National
Construction Authority, Institute of Engineers, Institute of Surveyors
and Architectural Association of Kenya.
"We will give
you land to build offices so that we can have all of you under one roof
to reduce bureaucracy in the construction sector," Mr Matiang'i said.
He
was speaking in Nairobi during the official launch of the BORAQS
seminar where he said this should be rolled out in all the 47 counties.
NCA has been developing a blueprint strategy to cut bureaucracy and collapse building approval procedures.
NCA
Board Chair Steve Oundo said in an earlier interview that fees charged
by the National Environmental Management Authority NEMA, County
governments and NCA should be collapsed together to reduce
inefficiencies.
CS Matiang'i last week said once the charges are rationalised they will be reduced to boost the building sector.
The
CS said the government was keen on exciting the private sector to build
up the construction industry which contributed immensely to the economy
last year.
ECONOMY
The
construction industry rose 13.1 per cent in 2014 compared to 5.8 per
cent in 2015 according to the Economic Survey contributing significantly
to the economy.
KNBS noted an 11per cent increase in
the participation in real estate and residential property in the first
quarter this year compared to 7.6per cent in a similar period last year.
The
industry has been boosted by residential apartments and real estate
especially with an upsurge of high end office space that has been
changing the landscape of Nairobi.
He also criticised governors for building 'grandiose buildings' without considering the resources available.
"People
wonder the reasoning for building worth Sh440 million with a budget of
Sh20 million every year, will it take over ten years to complete it," he
said.
Mr Matyangi said he had met a Senate Special
Committee to look at infrastructure in counties and would be meeting the
council of governors to bring back sanity in the sector.
He
said that it was wasteful to come up with so many expensive projects
which will stall and called on the professionals to advise county
governments to match their plans with the available resources.
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