How Kunlé Adeyemi "Engages the Local and Specific To Have a Powerful Effect on a Global Level"

Subscriber Access

Kunlé Adeyemi, the 38 year-old former disciple of Rem Koolhaas, made headlines last year with his Makoko Floating School, which enabled better access to education a slum community in Lagos. In this profile of Adeyemi and his Practice NLÉ Architects, originally published by Metropolis Magazine, Avinash Rajagopal explores what drives the young architect, explaining why he was selected as one of 10 designers in Metropolis Magazine's 2014 New Talent list.

When the Makoko Floating School was completed in March 2013, it received wildly enthusiastic critical acclaim from the international news media. The simple A-frame structure, buoyed by recycled plastic barrels in a lagoon in Lagos, Nigeria, was designed by NLÉ, a Lagos- and Amsterdam-based studio founded by the architect Kunlé Adeyemi. The project, intended as a model for how Lagos’s floating community could build simple, sustainable structures for themselves, subsequently faced a few challenges. One of the biggest was winning over local officials, who simply did not know what to make of such a building.

Content Loader
About this author
Cite: Avinash Rajagopal. "How Kunlé Adeyemi "Engages the Local and Specific To Have a Powerful Effect on a Global Level"" 30 Oct 2014. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/563200/how-kunle-adeyemi-engages-the-local-and-specific-to-have-a-powerful-effect-on-a-global-level> ISSN 0719-8884

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.