Government Should Consider Constructing Roads Within Built Estates
…sinking Boreholes in every building within an estate is worrisome


Tony Oge Eze, is a shrewd entrepreneur he oversees the affairs of Domani Suite And Leisure Limited, Festac, he schooled outside the shores of this country, Tokyo to be precise. He is a certified Microsoft software developer in Japan, where he currently resides.
He attended African Church Grammar School (Afro) Apata Ganga, Ibadan, he is an indigene of Anambra, given birth to in Ibadan when his parents migrated to Ibadan, he grew up to know his father as the principal technologist at National Cereal Research Institute (NCRII) in Apata, Ibadan, while his mother supports his father as a businesswoman.

He is also a qualified developer with some units of landed property in the Abraham Adesanya Area of Lagos State, under Filtype Consign and Concept Limited, a company that deals in land acquisition, development and sales.
CREEKVIBES Oluwadamilare Daniels asked about the constraints on his part as a real estate entrepreneur. He said, “The constraint in this country is money, the government should provide accessible loans to individuals to enable them to acquire cheap apartments for themselves and their family, after real estate players finished building the houses they still end up constructing the roads, in my opinion, the government should take it upon themselves to construct roads within an already completed estate as a contribution to the already developed edifices; link roads are paramount.”

“Another issue that borders me is the sinking of boreholes in all the houses within an estate, having left in some other parts of the world I think it is not the best thing to do. Although presently I live in Japan.
Mr Tony Eze is happily married with a son., he gives a tip on marriage and relationships, he said; “I remembered what my father use to say, ‘Marriage or relationship is a package, it is only when you open it you can discover the content,’ and again by marriage there is no formular, it is what works for you, perhaps might not work for someone else.”





