For years, the conversations about premium Lagos living drifted east—to Lekki, the Island, and wherever the next waterfront tower was rising. But a quieter, more practical shift is now underway, and it is happening on the mainland.

Buyers who want homes without surrendering two hours a day to traffic, and investors hunting dependable rental income backed by a clean title, are taking a second look at Ilupeju. At the centre of that renewed attention sits Ilupeju Gardens Phase 2.

The estate, developed by Design Union Limited in partnership with the Lagos State Development and Property Corporation (LSDPC), is located at 13–20, Esther Oshiyemi Street, Ilupeju, Phase 2, rising directly alongside the fully delivered Phase 1, and sharing its established roads, services and security.

With completion scheduled for the second quarter of 2027 and several blocks already well advanced, the estate offers something increasingly rare in Lagos: ‘A home you can watch being built, at a price you can lock in today.’

A step through the estate gates gives an immediate home appeal. Phase 2 is a calm, low-density residential community of 17 blocks, designed around the rhythms of real family life rather than the noise of the city outside. Children’s laughter from the playground, a morning length in the pool, an evening unwinding at the gym or spa are the daily textures of living here, not amenities on a brochure.

Read also: More homeowners on the way as construction progresses on Ilupeju Gardens Phase 2

The developer built the homes according to how people actually live such that buyers can choose across three categories to match their stage of life and budget. There are three home typologies.

These are Type A, comprising 4-bedroom maisonettes (1st–4th floors), with 1-bedroom penthouses on selected top floors. Type B consists of 1- and 2-bedroom apartments, ideal for individuals and young couples, while Type C comprises 3-bedroom apartments for growing families.

Every block is served by an elevator, every unit comes with dedicated parking, and the layouts favour even floors, clean finishing and natural light over flash. It is a home you settle into, not one you simply own.

Ilupeju Gardens is an asset that works because, for an investor, it is the same address that reads differently. Ilupeju is one of the mainland’s most connected corridors, just a few minutes’ drive from the business districts of Maryland, Yaba and the central business axis.

It has deep, year-round rental demand from professionals and young families who want quality housing close to work. A well-finished, fully serviced apartment behind a controlled gate is precisely the product that segment is short of.

That demand translates into two things buyers care about most: steady occupancy and naira values that hold. In a market where prime, properly titled stock is scarce, an Ilupeju Gardens unit is positioned to generate rental income while it appreciates. It is an asset that earns its keep whether the owner lives in it or let it.

A major high point of this assets is that it boasts a title buyers can trust. In Lagos, the fastest way to lose money in property is not a bad location,but a bad document. This is one area where Ilupeju Gardens quietly separates itself.

The development carries a Letter of Allocation issued directly by the Lagos State Development and Property Corporation (LSDPC), with the institutional oversight that a state-backed joint venture brings.

Ownership is clear, documentation is clean, and the developer — Design Union — brings a 25-year delivery record to the table. For both the family buying a forever home and the investor protecting capital, that certainty is the foundation everything else stands on.

The developers assure that the estate is built to last, explaining that the blocks sit on a pile foundation system which is a notable upgrade on the raft foundations used in Phase 1, and finishing is consistent across both phases.

These include long-span aluminium roofing, POP suspended ceilings, reinforced security doors, panel and aluminium-framed windows, and tiled floors throughout. Emphasis is on structural stability and clean, durable finishing rather than decoration that fades.

Phases 1 and 2 of the development share fully established infrastructure, with new recreational facilities introduced alongside Phase 2. The new facilities include community hall with retail shops, swimming pool, children’s playground, gym and spa, and paved streets, covered drainage, perimeter fencing, and controlled entry and exit gates.

Others are street lighting with CCTV surveillance for added security; power via a dedicated public line (Band A), with 500KVA and 250KVA generators as backup, and water treatment plant for potable water, plus fire safety systems installed to regulation.

Facility management, including elevator maintenance, is handled by the Residents’ Association in collaboration with professional facility managers. Parking is generous — two spaces for each 4-bedroom maisonette and one for every apartment — with additional visitor parking and on-site staff quarters within the estate.

 

SENIOR ANALYST - REAL ESTATE

Join BusinessDay whatsapp Channel, to stay up to date

Open In Whatsapp