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Michael Olutusen Onafowokan | |
|---|---|
Onafowokan in 1990 | |
| Born | (1912-12-01)1 December 1912 |
| Died | 25 July 1991(1991-07-25) (aged 78) Lagos, Nigeria |
| Alma mater | Glasgow Caledonian University |
| Occupation | Architect |
| Spouse | Joana Adetola Onafowokan (before 1991) |
| Children | 6 |
| Awards | Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON) |
| Buildings | |
Michael Olutusen Onafowokan (1912–1991)[1] was a Nigerian architect regarded as the pioneer of architecture in Nigeria and Commonwealth Africa.[2] He was one of the pioneers ofTropical Modernism an architectural design era that took into consideration the climatic condition of the region and attempted to curtail or utilize the climatic condition through the use of design elements, styles and concepts.[3]

Michael Olutusen Onafowokan was born in Ikorodu, Lagos State Nigeria where he attended the Methodist Primary School Ita-Elewa Ikorodu and St. Peters Primary School Faji-Ajele Street Lagos.[4] For his secondary education, he attended theMethodist Boys' High School in Lagos. He passed the Junior Cambridge Examination in 1932, after which he attended the Public Works Department technical school and obtained a diploma in Civil Engineering in 1938.[4]
Michael Olutusen Onafowokan started working after his training at the Public Works Department. Below is a succinct trajectory of his career path.
1937–1946
He also worked in different provinces in Nigeria and some parts ofWest Africa around this time.Drawing and Quantity Surveying Section –1937–1939
Junior Technical Staff –1937–1942
Works and Building Section –1939–1946
University Evening Classes in Lagos –1942–1945
passed theUniversity of London Matriculation Examination in1946
Started at theRoyal Technical College London1946
Transferred toGlasgow Caledonian University in1947
Bachelor of Science in Architecture –1952
Post Graduate Diploma in Town Planning –1953
He returned to Nigeria in 1953 and started working in the old Western region, by 1954 he was working with the Ministry of Lands and Housing in Ibadan and later in the Ministry of Transport. He retired on 1 December 1968 as the Chief Regional Architect. He later went into private practice in the name of Onafowokan Cityscape Group.[5][6] The architecture firm still exists in the modern day as Onafowokan Cityscape Limited over 30 years after his death.OCL is also a town planning firm.[7]
He worked on projects and his style is typified by the utilization of green spaces in his design and the complete integration of the building with environmental elements, his style of design was mostly asymmetric.[8]
He championed the architectural philosophy ofTropical Modernism in Nigeria,[9] ensuring that the users of buildings are not affected by the climate, the hospitals like theLagos State University Teaching Hospital,[10] the Patriarch Bolaji Methodist Church which was designed in 1969 were great examples of tropical modernism architectural design philosophy at play in Nigeria.[11]
Some projects done by Onafowakan Michael Olutusen include:
These are pictures of works of Michael Olutusen Onafowokan some have been rehabilitated and others still in there original forms maintaining the same facade and elements when they were first designed.




Office of the Order of the Niger (OON)1982[12]
Award of Appreciation MBHS Ibadan (1988)
Post Humous Award NIA (2010)
Award of Appreciation IDRDG (2011)