Opinions of Monday, 23 August 2021
Columnist: Kwasi Asare
Rise up fallen fighters
Rise and take your stance again
'Tis he who fight and run away
Live to fight another day – Bob Marley, September 1975
Bob Marley’s “Heathen” was playing as I wrote this. Coincidence and appropriate!!
We fought this whole “architecture fight” and temporarily lost, but we are not losing this second fight. On Tuesday, August 17, 2021, I received a lot of messages with links connected to the 111 District Hospitals to be built all over the country.
It was welcoming to those of us who often ply our architecture sometimes in rural areas and seeing that a government was taking bold steps to provide health infrastructure to the citizenry wherever they may be.
I was wondering why the messages kept coming. Then the message sunk that there was a new model hospital designed by Adjaye and Associates. Again? For those of us in Architecture, we know that there are model District Hospitals designs already.
Did we have to redesign a District Hospital Model again? We know that the Estate Department of the Ghana Health Service has had a few District Hospitals models with specifications and so I rhetorically asked if there was any serious reason why this could not be adopted?
As the day grew into the morning, I got more than a few calls from Architects; very senior, my contemporaries, much younger architects, and even some from the Public Sector. More shocking was the similarities in their questions….” so now Local Ghanaians cannot even design District Hospitals and that has to be given to Adjaye and Associates?”
I retorted that of course, he is Ghanaian. “But it was handed over to him on a silver platter?” was a response.
“In addition to all other large projects; the Cathedral, and a long list of projects”. These are serious questions that need to be responded to. I join my colleague architects to say we are seriously concerned with the consistent abuse of Section 40 Procurement Act, without conscience and no attempt to equitably and legally go through the process for local architects who also make a living.
There are about 1,200 architects in Ghana and we are not incompetent.
Government projects must be procured in accordance with Procurement Rules
The initial reason for David Adjaye’s grand entry to Ghana was the design and construction of the National Cathedral. It was welcoming to have an architect of repute on our shores.
The Cathedral in all intents and purposes was to stop the undignified National Thanksgiving Services at the Independence square and State Funerals at the forecourt of the State House.
However, the Ghana Institute of Architects has complained to our political leadership that the procurement of the National Cathedral was not consistent with our laws.
In Ghana, the owner of the land on which there is any development determines the ownership. That is fact and law in Ghana. Regularly, the Planning and Building Permit Application is made in the name of the owner of the land.
Therefore, though the President of the Republic mooted the idea of the National Cathedral on state lands, the ownership status changed from a personal vision to a state project regardless of who is funding the project.
The procurement therefore should be consistent with our laws and the post-construction operations would have to be assumed by organs of state.
It stands to reason that for the construction of the 111 District Hospitals, the same laws will be applicable. There are hardly any further debates about this.
The question therefore remains, why does the government decide to single-source these projects without recourse to Section 40 of the Procurement Law? The law states as follows:
Public Procurement Act 663 - Section - 40 - Single-Source Procurement.
(1) A procurement entity may engage in single-source procurement under section 41 with the approval of the Board,
a. where goods, works, or services are only available from a particular supplier or contractor, or if a particular supplier or contractor has exclusive rights in respect of the goods, works, or services, and no reasonable alternative or substitute exists;
b. where there is an urgent need for the goods, works, or services and engaging in tender proceedings or any other method of procurement is impractical due to unforeseeable circumstances giving rise to the urgency which is not the result of dilatory conduct on the part of the procurement entity;
c. where owing to a catastrophic event, there is an urgent need for the goods, works, or technical services, making it impractical to use other methods of procurement because of the time involved in using those methods;
Public Statements against Single-Sourcing of Projects
1.February 3, 2017, - We will abort ‘rampant’ sole sourcing – HE Mahamadu Bawumia, Vice President of the Republic of Ghana, Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia has indicated that government will tighten the bolts on sole sourcing and go strictly by the provisions of the Public Procurement Act. Speaking at the maiden Good Corporate Governance Series in Accra, the Vice President said, “We want to ensure strict enforcement of the Public Procurement Act; looking at the bill as it was designed, sole-sourcing was not supposed to be as rampant as we are seeing now."
2. October 3, 2017 – Looters through sole-sourcing will not be spared – Hon. Adwoa Safo Minister of State in Charge of Public Procurement
Former Minister of State in Charge of Public Procurement – Hon. Sarah Adwoa Safo issued a public notice to Public Servants to be wary of the Public Procurement Act with particular reference to sole sourcing (single-sourced) under the leadership of President Nana Akufo-Addo era where state looting through the abuse of such methods is “now a thing of the past as all efforts are being made to investigate and bring closure to some of these issues”.
“I must sternly warn that whoever will be found culpable will be dealt with in accordance with the law,” Hon. Safo emphasized.
3. November 21, 2016 - Ghana Loses $2bn In Sole-Sourced Contracts
The Danquah Institute, a public policy research centre, has painstakingly undertaken due diligence on a number of public procurement contracts awarded on either sole-sourcing or restrictive tender basis since 2010, involving over GH¢12 billion (US$2.96 billion in nominal terms).
Our findings suggest that an estimated 65% savings could have been made if those deals were subjected to competitive tendering. That translates into GH¢7.8 billion savings in public funds, equivalent to US$1.93 billion, nominally.
As a man sow, shall he reap
And I know talk is cheap.
But the hotter the battle
A sweeter Jah victory – Bob Marley, September 1975
What is the internal culture and ethics of Adjaye Associates?
Great firms thrive on great internal ethics and culture. Many corporate gurus believe that internal culture drives the ethics of many conglomerates.
It basically sums up ideas, beliefs, and values for staff, working environments, and how business is procured.
So, it is expected that even if the political leadership missed the opportunity to respond positively to our procurement processes and laws, for such an architect of such repute, he should have the structures to pull the plug.
Did his legal aides investigate to find out if the project had gone through the legal procurement process? Or did he just welcome a project handed to him because after all, it was an opportunity for more accolades and money?
Again, this is not the first time Ghanaian Architects have complained about David Adjaye and the mode of securing projects. In one of his responses, he proverbially told Ghanaian Architects on 3FM that “…if you have a big fish in a small pond, you will have to grow your body too”. Ghana is a small pond indeed.
What is the internal culture and ethics of local consultants on the project?
The project information published lists, local consultants. Many, whom I know personally, are leaders in the industry. Leadership should eschew the spirit of morality at both the individual or community level. Some of these Architects and Engineers complained in the era when the Jubilee House was built. They complained when the National Cathedral was designed.
They complained when the Marine Drive was awarded to David Adjaye and Associates. What has changed? These leaders are those who should be at the helm of insisting on compliance with the law and making sure that projects are distributed fairly.
For very simple reasons; projects such as these can be used to even build the capacity of younger architects and engineers.
Is David Adjaye’s design Philosophy that original?
As mentioned earlier, the Estate Department of Ghana Health Service has in their custody designs models of District Hospitals and some have been built.
The form is quite simple; a spine for circulation and appendages that spring out of the spine into functional various areas; wards, surgical theatres, etc. Indeed, there are aerial photographs of hospitals built in various places in Ghana.
He has stated in his write-up to this design that the philosophy behind the concept is a crocodile in form.
Many of us doubt this. We expect more from a strong man. We expect this to be interrogated dispassionately. Of course, this design could have been reviewed, specifications upgraded, and cost for implementation.
If we had this already in our kitty the next question would be whether there was a need to redesign this for the huge sums of money to be paid when Ghana is in dire straits?
This is a typical layout of the Ghana Health Service Model District Hospital.
Where was David Adjaye when the National Infectious Center was executed for free?
In the heat of the covid infections, hospitals were getting filled up, help was needed and Ghanaian Architects, Engineers, and Quantity Surveyors stood up and were counted.
The Built Environment Professionals led the way to design and build the National Infectious Disease Center. The private sector showed up and financed it to completion in record time.
The project was hailed and rivaled. Soon after this, the Indian Institute of Architects had reason to speak to the architects of the project.
One value Ghanaians cherish is benevolence and the Built Environment Professional lived up to this. We would have been elated to have Adjaye join the team, shed a few of his “Big Fish” high-valued services to serve the Ghanaian Tax Payer. In the true Ghanaian spirit, we opened our palms and gave them to mother Ghana. Yes, we did…for free.
Grow Ghana
In conclusion, we want a bold statement from the Ghana Institute of Architects and Ghana Institution of Engineering who are at the forefront of this. We also want a statement from our Political Leadership to identify if they stand with us in the obedience of the law or would be “heathen.”
We believe in Ghana and nobody can build this country for us. Growth is intentional not just through competition. Sometimes one needs to do conscious hand-holding.
God bless our homeland Ghana.