8 Bedroom Unfurnished Property for Sale in Festac, Amuwo Odofin, Lagos
There are 6 available 8 bedroom furnished flats, houses, land and commercial property for sale in Festac, Amuwo Odofin, Lagos, Nigeria. The property have been listed by estate agents who can be contacted using the contact information provided for each property listing. The list can be filtered by price, furnishing and recency.
For sale 5 bedroom flat up and 2numbers 3bed room flat down on 1 and half plot of land.
location- satalite town close to navy town omowo odofin lagos state.
title documents- federal government allocation.
350,000,000
agency fee applies 5%
bellings ol...
A storey building and 2 storey building blocks of flats.
location -: newsite off navytown, lagos.
5mins drive to festac
consists of:
4 units of 3 beds
4 units of 1 bed
2 units of 2 beds
plus
2 units of a room self con
asking price -:1...
For sale
a three star standard hotel build on a corner piece with 2100sqm2 of land located at amuwo odofin with;
- 25 standard rooms
- 5 suites
- 1 kings room
- swimming pool
- jacuzzi
- total of 31 rooms
- 300sqm of event hall with air-conditioning, outdoor swimming pool court
- 3 v.i.p seat out
- executive indoor bar
- v.i.p seat out for a meeting venue
- standard kitchen with standard restaurant - outdoor bush bar with a standard seat out with two standard tables tennis court. -900sqm2 of car parking space
- all outside estate road is fully tiled with interlocking with enough parking space.
price: 2.5b ask...
Luxury hotel development of about 16 rooms with lounge, kitchen, laundry, with surround sound system, cctv etc
the hotel is located at amuwo odofin, festac lagos sta...
Festac is a Federal Housing Estate in Lagos state, Nigeria. It is located along the Lagos-Badagry Expressway in Lagos State, Nigeria. The name Festac was derived form the acronym FESTAC, which stands for Second World African Festival of Arts and Culture that was held there in 1977. Festac town, originally referred to as "Festival Town" or "Festac Village", is a residential estate designed to house the participants of the Second World Festival of Black Arts and Culture of 1977 (Festac77).
The Nigerian government invested substantial sums of money and resources into building Festac Town, which sported state of the art electrical generators, police and fire stations, access to public transportation, supermarkets, banks, health centres, public restrooms, and postal services. The village was therefore intended to evoke the modern age and the promise of state-sponsored economic development fueled by oil revenues.