THE state
government on Sunday indicated plans to reconstruct the popular Ladipo Auto
Spare Parts Market Road and other connecting roads to enhance vehicular
movement within the axis.
This was disclosed when government officials inspected some road
networks in the Papa Ajao and Ladipo Spare Parts Market areas in Mushin and
Oshodi/ Isolo Local Government Areas of the State
with a commitment to commence
rehabilitation that would make the roads motorable.
Ladipo Market |
Permanent Secretary in the State Ministry of Works and
Infrastructure, Mr. Bamgbose-Martins, who led the inspection, said plans are
underway to get the contractor working on the Daleko Road back on site to
finish the remaining portions of the road. “We need to get the contractor back
on site to work on the bad spots on the roads in these areas so that the roads
can become motorable,”
he said.
A martin, who was joined by the General Manager, Lagos State
Public Works Corporation, Ayotunde
Sodeinde, the Chief Press Secretary, Habib
Aruna and other officials of the Ministry of Works and Infrastructure, said
palliative measures would be applied by the Public Works Corporation on other
roads and craters in the Papa Ajao area.
Ladipo-Market-Rd |
On the state of Ladipo Market Road, he ruled out the option of
carrying out palliative work, saying that what the road needs is total
reconstruction. “One of the things you would observe is that the road here is
gone in terms of standard road, it’s gone. It’s not a case for palliative; it’s
not a case for patching, this is a case where the road has to be totally
reconstructed.
“We need to redesign it to fit into the habits and the use that is
here. It’s a market. There are rocks here, so it is still motorable, even if it
rains, it is motorable. So PWC can’t come here and put asphalt because it’s not
going to last.
If they put asphalt, the next rain, it will wash off,” he said.
He, however, said thestate would list the road in its plan of work for next
year as some other roads in the State need urgent attention.
“It is still passable now, but what we need here is a full
construction. When we are going to do anything, we are going to redesign it and
then we have to reconstruct from the beginning, that’s the situation here, but
for now, at least it’s motorable.
“If we allow Public Works Corporation (PWC) come in here, we would
just come and waste resources, but we’ll redesign it. We’ll probably take the
option of using concrete pavement, we call it reinforced concrete, rigid
pavement and the reason we consider that is because there’s a market here and
what it means is that heavy vehicles will come here, you’re going to have
tankers, trailers come in here with heavy axle loading.
“Some of them would even park here. Any road here that we don’t
put in a lasting solution will fail. So this would be one of the things we
would begin to look at next year, it’s not going to be an immediate thing, but
between now and then we’ll do the design of the road. Even the soil effect is
affected, we’ll have to rip it off and do it all over again,” he pledged.
He cautioned the traders in Ladipo Market area against parking
containers and articulated vehicles on the roads, saying the roads are not
designed for such heavy trucks to be stationery on the roads with loads inside
the trucks.
“The roads are not designed for trailers to park on them. This is
what we saw when we went to Apapa. You have trailers parking on the Bridges
permanently and that’s what you call static loading, it’s not designed for
that. The bridge won’t collapse, but overtime, there’ll be fatigue. The same
thing that can happen to the bridge can also happen to the roads,” he said.
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