Joint Venture Mixed-use Land Near Lagos Business School, Ajah, Lagos
There are 2 available mixed-use land joint venture near Lagos Business School, Ajah, Lagos, Nigeria. The mixed-use land have been listed by estate agents who can be contacted using the contact information provided for each mixed-use land listing. The list can be filtered by price, furnishing and recency.
Semi direct
*joint venture facing the lekki express way just after lagos state business school lbs sangotedo lekki
*land size* 20 plots
dry land
*land value* n250m per plot
*proposal* *open*
*premium* nill
tittle c of o
*facilitators fee* 10% of total land value
cheers
been awh...
Just out
jv! jv!! jv!!!
a table vacant land in a lovely and fantastic serene premium estate before lbs, ajah lagos available for joint venture.
proposal: 28 nos of 2 bedroom flats.
sharing formula: 13nos of carcass to the land owner (without the interiors fi ishing) / 15nos to the
land size: 1542sqm
premium: no
land value: #431m
facilitators fee : 10%
(agpej)
for enquiries:
note:
* no long chain please.
*
* am dealing with semi-mandate
#v(t)m...
₦431,000,000
Property Finders (ibile Global Mart Limited)
09068786533
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About Lagos, Nigeria
Lagos is a port and the most populous city in Nigeria. It is the second fastest-growing city in Africa and the seventh in the world. The population of Lagos according to the Lagos State Government, was 17.5 million. These figures are however disputed by the Nigerian Government and judged unreliable by the National Population Commission of Nigeria. The latest reports estimate the population at 21 million, making Lagos the largest city in Africa.
Lagos is a metropolitan area which originated on islands separated by creeks, such as Lagos Island, fringing the southwest mouth of Lagos Lagoon while protected from the Atlantic Ocean by long sand spits such as Bar Beach, which stretch up to 100 kilometres (62 miles) east and west of the mouth. From the beginning, Lagos has expanded on the mainland west of the lagoon and the conurbation, including Ikeja (which is the capital of Lagos) and Agege, now reaches more than 40 kilometres (25 miles) north-west of Lagos Island. Some suburbs include Ikorodu, Epe and Badagry, and more local councils have recently been created, bringing the total number of local governments in Lagos to 57.