PVC vs PPR vs Galvanised: Which Pipe for Which Job in Africa

Three pipe types dominate African build sites — PVC, PPR, and galvanised steel — and each one has jobs it was designed for and jobs it will fail at. Using the wrong pipe, or substituting one for another because it was cheaper or available on the day, is one of the most common sources of plumbing callbacks and concealed failures in African construction. The post breaks down each pipe type in plain language, covers the one rule most builders get wrong (never use PVC on hot water lines), and provides a quick-reference table mapping every common application — cold supply, hot supply, drainage, underground burial, exposed industrial use — to the right pipe choice. There's also a section on how Africa's water conditions affect pipe selection, from the hard water of East and Southern Africa to the salt air of coastal cities like Lagos, Mombasa, and Accra. It closes with the four most common plumbing mistakes on site and what to check when ordering pipe online.

How to Buy Building Materials Online Without Getting Burned

Africa's construction sector is growing fast, but most builders are still sourcing materials the old way — market visits, cash transactions, inconsistent suppliers, and no paper trail. This post breaks down why that approach quietly costs more than it should, and what a smarter procurement process looks like in practice. The piece walks through four things to demand from any online supplier: clear product specifications, zone-based delivery pricing, live order tracking, and automatic invoicing. It then covers the three material categories that matter most on any build — structural, finishing, and MEP — and explains why consolidating orders through one platform reduces cost, saves time, and simplifies site management. There's also a focused section on cement, blocks, and steel, where spec errors are most expensive, and a practical note on dispute handling and accountability — the trust question most first-time online buyers have. Throughout, the tone is written for three audiences at once: contractors managing multiple sites, self-build homeowners doing their first project, and project managers who need clean financial records. Each section gives them something they can act on.