LAGOS, NIGERIA | "Eko — The City That Never Sleeps"
Lagos is the largest city in Africa and the most kinetic urban environment on the continent. A sprawling megacity of over twenty million people on the Bight of Benin where the energy of commerce, music, art, and sheer human density produces a street-level experience that is unlike anything else in the world. The city is built across a network of islands and lagoons on the southwestern Nigerian coast, and the daily rhythm of its life is visible from above in the yellow danfo buses weaving through the markets, the painted umbrellas of the street vendors, and the extraordinary color and noise of a city that has no off switch. Lagos is simultaneously the financial capital of sub-Saharan Africa, the creative engine of Afrobeats culture, and the city that has produced more of the continent's contemporary art, literature, and music than anywhere else on earth.
The colors are extraordinary and specific: the brilliant yellow of the danfo buses against the terracotta-red laterite dust, the deep green of the lagoon water below the Third Mainland Bridge, the saturated Ankara wax print patterns on every surface from market stalls to office walls, and the warm amber of the West African coastal evening light as it falls across the Victoria Island skyline. This is a palette that pulses rather than rests.