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Barriers in Nigeria’s public hospital green buildings implementation initiatives

Andrew Ebekozien (Department of Construction Management and Quantity Surveying, Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Solomon Oisasoje Ayo-Odifiri (Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Nigeria)
Angeline Ngozika Chibuike Nwaole (Quantity Surveying Department, Federal Polytechnic, Nekede, Nigeria)
Aginah Lawrence Ibeabuchi (Quantity Surveying Department, Federal Polytechnic, Nekede, Nigeria)
Felix Ebholo Uwadia (Quantity Surveying Department, School of Environmental Studies, Auchi Polytechnic, Auchi, Nigeria)

Journal of Facilities Management

ISSN: 1472-5967

Article publication date: 18 August 2021

Issue publication date: 28 July 2022

379

Abstract

Purpose

The high consumption of energy by buildings may have enhanced land degradation, flooding, air pollution and many other hazardous environmental issues. However, green practices in buildings have been proved as one of the successful technologies to mitigate these issues. Past studies have shown lax green practices in Nigerian buildings. Concerning public hospital buildings, this is yet to be explored. Therefore, this paper aims to investigate the barriers to green practices and proffer possible policy solutions to promote hospital green buildings.

Design/methodology/approach

In attaining these objectives, the view of hospital building contractors, design team, hospital management and policymakers in the relevant ministries/agencies was engaged via virtual interviews. The collated data were analysed and presented in the thematic pattern.

Findings

Findings show that green building construction is extremely low in Nigeria, but the worst hit is the health-care buildings across the states. Government/policy-related, organisational/leadership-related, financial-related, technical-related, design team-related and stakeholders’ behaviour-related barriers emerged as the main six themes of barriers affecting public hospital green buildings implementation initiatives. Findings show that proffering possible policies to addressing these barriers may improve public hospital green construction across the states.

Research limitations/implications

This paper is limited to barriers to green buildings implementation in public hospitals in Nigeria, and data collection was through virtual interviews but does not affect the strength of the findings. Thus, this paper suggests that the sub-themes and variables/items that emerged from the collated data as presented in Figure 1 can be further developed quantitatively via questionnaire survey to validate and improve the reliability of results from this paper.

Practical implications

As part of this study’s implications, suggestions from this paper will stir up policymakers’ decisions, to be tailored towards achieving green buildings implementation initiatives in Nigerian public hospitals.

Originality/value

To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this paper is probably the first that attempted to investigate the barriers to green buildings implementation in public hospitals in Nigeria.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to the participants for providing knowledgeable contributions to enhance the findings of this paper. Also, the authors appreciate the comments, suggestions, and recommendations provided by the anonymous reviewers, which collectively helped hone and strengthen the quality of this manuscript during the blind peer-review process.

Funding: Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment and CIDB Centre of Excellence (05-35-061890), University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa.

Citation

Ebekozien, A., Ayo-Odifiri, S.O., Nwaole, A.N.C., Ibeabuchi, A.L. and Uwadia, F.E. (2022), "Barriers in Nigeria’s public hospital green buildings implementation initiatives", Journal of Facilities Management, Vol. 20 No. 4, pp. 586-605. https://doi.org/10.1108/JFM-01-2021-0009

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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