I have been walking construction sites since 2021, right after finishing my National Diploma. Before I had a B.Tech in my hand, I was already watching buildings go up in real time, standing next to masons, watching concrete get mixed, and learning things that no studio ever teaches you.
One thing kept repeating itself on every site. The workers could not read the drawings. Not because they were not skilled at what they did, but because most technical drawings are produced for approval, not for construction. They are made to satisfy a planning office or impress a client, not to guide the person actually holding the trowel.
That observation changed how I approach every project. I believe construction documentation should be understood by the people building it, not just the people approving it, drawn and annotated in a way that makes sense on the ground, not just on paper. Clean geometry. Clear dimensions. No ambiguity that leaves a mason guessing and guessing wrong.
Before architecture, I worked in bespoke tailoring. That background gave me something architecture school reinforces but rarely creates from scratch: an obsession with how things fit together. Precision. Material sensitivity. The understanding that the difference between good and excellent usually lives in details most people skip.
Today I work with homeowners and property investors who want modern, functional buildings and want to avoid the costly mistakes that happen when design and construction are not properly connected. I also work remotely with architects and small firms who need skilled support on Revit modelling, renders, spatial planning, and construction documentation.
Most architectural drawings are made for approval.
Mine are made for construction.
That is not a tagline. It is the single most important lesson five years of site experience has taught me. A drawing that cannot be read on site is not a complete drawing. It is half a job.
The Quick Version
B.Tech in Architectural Technology. Trained in both the creative and technical dimensions of building design.
Active on construction sites since 2021. I understand how design decisions translate, or fail to translate, into actual built work.
Revit, AutoCAD, SketchUp, Vray and architectural visualization. Producing clean, coordinated models and documentation for local and remote projects.
Abuja, Nigeria. Working with local clients on site and remotely with architects and firms across time zones.
Ready to work with someone who gets it?
Whether you are building in Abuja or need remote architectural support, let’s talk.
Prefer to talk first? Message me on WhatsApp