Friday, 11 October 2019

Writers’ Resort Set To Redefine Abuja Tourism Landscape


WRITERS’ RESORT SET TO REDEFINE ABUJA TOURISM LANDSCAPE

By VICTOR NZE 
Nestled in-between two scenic hills, the Mamman Vatsa Writers’ Resort in Mpape could well redefine the tourism landscape of Abuja before the end of the year.
Spanning over 30 hectares of pure nature, the resort has all it takes to corner the leisure and adventure tourism market in not just the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) but also the country, as it offers much more to meetings, incentives, conferences and events (MICE) aspect of tourism as a destination.
Sitting on a location barely 40 minute-drive from the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja, and less than 25 metres from a Nigerian mobile police (Mopol) major facility, the resort is ideally a one-stop centre for not only literary enthusiasts and scholars who may come to hibernate, but as well as tourists, extreme sport seekers, for whom every part of the landscape represents a thrill.
Owned by the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), the resort excites members in terms of the huge savings on accommodation and conferencing running costs incurred annually on account of the group’s national programmes, this is also the private sector is taking sneak previews on the project’s untapped goldmine.
This is so because it was not up until two years ago in 2017 that active construction commenced on the site as a broadened vision by members informed the need to mine the location’s many opportunities, which included self-sustainability, among others.
Positioned to house the association’s national headquarters complex, the resort has designs for residency chalets, a 500-Seater auditorium, e-libraries, ANA state offices, archives, depositories and many other facilities in the direction.
However, as a tourist resort, the multi-purpose facility boasts of a 50-room key hotel, a three-storey coliseum and amphi-theatre, shopping malls, banking halls, its own dedicated power supply substation complete with green areas, as well as hiking ranges situated in the surrounding hills.
The steam in members to actualize this dream of a befitting resort for writers is also strengthened by the drive to prominently play a major role in filling the vacuum created by the void in adventure tourism in the country.
Speaking when the group hosted a project media tour/press conference, last Saturday, in Mpape, President of ANA, Mallam Abdullahi Denja, who first pointed out that before 2017 there was no meaningful activity on the site, said the expedited action by his executive council towards realizing the facility was to give members a ‘resort to be proud of, after many years of battling activities of land grabbers at the courts.’
For Denja, who also doubles as a senior director at the National Council for Arts and Craft (NCAC),the resort is purely and essentially a business venture which will be operated by a third party to ensure professionalism and guarantee investors of good returns on investment (ROIs).
“It was the dream of this present National Executive Council of ANA initially to complete this project in its entirety, at least the first phase or commission some structures into full functionality. It was a commissioning ceremony we had thought we would do before we quit office in November, 2019.
 “Based on this and in agreement with the developer, we set out well thought-out developmental timelines in black and white, which the vagaries of climate, Abuja land development bureaucracy, engineering hitches and general harsh economic environment have made impossible to meet,” Denja said.
Continuing, Denja said: “We have a renewable MoU with the developer under a build, operate and transfer (BOT) arrangement. So after construction, the developer is in-charge of negotiations with investors and other private interests to run the facility. ANA is not the operator. It’s a business arrangement which will be run as such.”
Secured back in 1985 through the support of the then Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Major General Mamman Jiya Vatsa (now late), actual development of the site took off around August 2017 with a signed Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between ANA and an indigenous firm, the Korlie Mobs Ventures Limited (KMVL) in 2013 to develop a 5-hectare space for a national headquarters and other structures for the association.
Speaking exclusively, boss of KMVL, Col. K. K Shaw (rtd) confirmed the deal saying the entire project should have been delivered by now as agreed under the MoU, but explained that climate issues have necessitated adjustments in the delivery date for the project.
According to him, logistics drawbacks occasioned by inclement weather conditions which forced construction work to halt for weeks on the site, was largely responsible, this is as he assured that all the challenges had now been sorted out, as he fixed a December date for the delivery of the major conference centre, while other projects on the site ‘will come on stream in 12 months’ time.’
Shaw, a former Managing Director of the Nigeria Army Housing Scheme, who said his company has been in operation since 1995 having acquired vast experiences in handling similar projects across the country, admitted that the writers’ resort project was his most challenging on account of the terrain.
“We have prosecuted a lot of difficult projects but this writers’ resort will amount as the most difficult in handling not in terms of funding, but rather topography,” Shaw said.
The project commissioning, it would be recalled, has once been postponed.
Indeed, a difficult topography and terrain may pose challenges to builders, it however brings a smile to the faces of adventure tourists and extreme sport seekers, who expect to exploit the thrill and challenge of hiking and trekking at the resort to the maximum, which is why the writers’ resort is expected to be boom to tourism.
“I think this place is going to be the pride of all literalists in Nigeria. I’m not physically strong as that but I have personally taken it upon myself to do this tour to see for myself this expansive structure. There was nothing here before now but I’m really proud of this. We sincerely have to finish this, and leave something behind for future generations,” said United States-based writer, Dr Adewunmi Oluwadiya, who was part of the tour.
The story of the ANA land, according to Denja, ‘has been a tale of flight away from here, hotly pursued by maximum rulers; it has been a story of lack of capacity, failed promises, betrayals, revocation, re-allocation, long-drawn litigations and brazen trespasses.’
 “It will interest you to know that what we have left today from the original 60.9 hectares is about 36.9 hectares. The story between the first and the second figures is also a well- known one in our association, and if you had look around very well, you may have caught some glimpses of it,” Denja explained the shrinking of the project site.
However, tourism experts in the country have remained upbeat that even on its present 36 hectares, the resort should comfortably corner the tourism industry leveraging on its well-documented pluses, even as they also express optimism that a 50-room key added to the Abuja hotel rooms will still positively make an impact, against the backdrop of the fact that the facility is expandable from the 5-hectre space occupied.
Furthermore, adding more rooms to the Abuja and by extension the Nigerian hospitality market appears to be profitable now against the backdrop of the sustained growth in revenues declared by hotels in the continent.
For the experts, now is the best time to invest in hospitality and tourism in Africa.
A recent report by the STR Group showed that revenue per available room (RevPAR), the key hotel industry performance metric in Nigeria, as well as other top tourism destination in Africa, has grown for 87 consecutive months amid a period of low supply growth and strong demand.
According to STR director Thomas Emanuel, in his presentation at the recently-concluded Africa Hotel Investment Forum in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Monday, using a 12-month moving average and U.S. dollar constant currency to remove the impact of currency fluctuations, Africa’s RevPAR was up 6.4 per cent to US$67.10 as of August 2019. Average daily rate (ADR), up 3.3 per cent, has had more of an impact on that growth than occupancy (+2.9).
“Africa has shown one of the better supply and demand balances on a global level. The continent’s industry continues to expand alongside rapidly developing economies and infrastructure, so there is definite investment opportunity even though finding the right opportunity is challenging. The prospects of greater supply growth as well as political and economic instability can also create difficult situations for the region’s hotel industry moving forward,” Emanuel said.
Other highlights from Emanuel’s presentation include that: Despite its massive geographical area, Africa has just roughly 5,000 hotels with only four countries in Africa offering more than 50,000 rooms, which include; Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia and South Africa.
Denja, therefore, used the opportunity of the media tour to woo investors into the project, explaining that good ROI is awaits them.

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