Massive Two Rivers mall in Nairobi aggressively conquers East & Central Africa shopping experience

Massive Two Rivers mall in Nairobi aggressively conquers East & Central Africa shopping experience

Kweli kabisa maana angalau Tanzania, mtu akikaa kwenye maghorofa hali siyo ngumu saaaana kama jamaa ktk magorofa ya Huruma. Mathare n.k Tuwaache wakashangae Malls na mataa ya sehemu za Gigiri n.k
Haha ukienda kupanga
A day in the life of tenants in dense Nairobi estate

HighPix.jpg

Residential flats in Nairobi's Huruma estate. In such neighbourhoods, the use of electric iron boxes is banned purportedly due to their high electricity consumption rate. ROBERT NGUGI | NATION MEDIA GROUP



Martha Kilonzi, in her early 30s, has not met her landlord more than two months since she rented a single room in his flat.

Ms Kilonzi parts with $30 (Sh3,000) per month for the one-and-a-half by one-and-a-half-metre room in Nairobi’s densely populated Huruma estate.

According to her, a tenant in the ill-fated seven-floor flat that collapsed last week, the high rise building comprised 301 doors, or houses for that matter.

The Kenya Red Cross personnel who led the rescue and evacuation, however, disagree, putting the total occupancy at 198 households.

In these neighbourhoods, flats can go as high as 10 storeys, with each floor comprising up to 10 houses.

Wash dishes

Bathrooms and toilets are communal, usually located at the extreme end of the floor. One will usually find a shared sink, mostly used to wash dishes, located at the balcony.

Households vary in size, from single tenants to extended families of up to seven, never mind the fact that the size of the room remains uniform in most cases.

Because of their relative comfort, single tenants, especially bachelors, are viewed with a degree of envy by their neighbours who have larger families.

It is not unusual for neighbours to “send on loan” a member of their family to the single tenant nearby, at times leading to unplanned marriages.

In some cases, neighbours with large families will deliberately encourage their teenage relatives to befriend their bachelor neighbours as a “decongestion” strategy.


Varied in size

In Ms Kilonzi’s rather rare case, the houses on the doomed Huruma flat varied in size.

Because her unit was relatively smaller, her rent was $30 per month, as opposed to her “wealthier” neighbours who paid as much as $45 (Sh4,500) to enjoy the comfort of more spacious rooms.

“Electricity was seriously rationed, the agent would switch it on in the early evening, usually at 7pm (+3GMT), just to allow us to prepare supper and watch television for those who could afford it. He would switch it off at 10.30pm on the dot, high-school-style,” she says.

Because of the tight restrictions on electricity and the fact that most houses on the flats lack windows to let in natural light, it is not uncommon to encounter tenants using torches or cheap mobile phones, better known as mulika mwizi, to find their way around the buildings even during daytime.

Wiring system

In these neighbourhoods, be it Huruma, Kariobangi, Dandora, Kayole or Dagoretti, the use of electric iron boxes is banned, purportedly due to their high electricity consumption rate.

Landlords in most cases will ensure the electricity wiring system is installed in such a way that it automatically switches off whenever one tries to switch the electric iron box on.

The option for most families is to invest in charcoal iron boxes or take their clothes to the numerous dhobis (makeshift laundries) scattered within the neighbourhoods.

Because of the insecurity in most of these densely populated low-end areas, people prefer living on the upper floors.

“By the time robbers reach your floor, the alarm would definitely have been raised. Thieves here prefer the lower floors,” says a long-term resident of a flat in Huruma, who did not want to be named.

Lower floors

The lower floors, too, have their advantages. For one, it is easier to move into houses and, more importantly, it is much easier to move out bulky household items like sofa sets during times of disaster.

Cleaning of shared facilities such as bathrooms, toilets or dish washing areas is a shared responsibility.

The women on each floor usually draw up the duty roster, and also enforce compliance by reporting uncooperative tenants to the agent for disciplinary action, which can be as drastic as eviction.

Quarrels are commonplace in these buildings. The source of the quarrels will range from one’s husband or child overstaying in the communal bathroom or toilet, one’s laundry occupying most of the clothes hanging line, or even the theft of one’s undergarments from the line.

The bottom

Every so often, some of the tenants have to act as arbitrators.

But for Kenyans near the bottom of the economic pyramid — who consider themselves lucky to escape from slums — neighbourhoods such as Huruma become the better option.

For one, everything goes in Huruma and similar areas. Essential goods such as maize flour, sugar, salt, cooking fat, kerosene and even washing detergents are sold in the smallest quantities.

With as little as $0.3 (Sh30), it is possible for a family of four – man, wife, a child and a house-help, usually a close relative, to have a “decent” meal of ugali, sukuma wiki (kales) and a sprinkling of chicken heads or matumbo (offals).

Source: A day in the life of tenants in dense Nairobi estate
Hahaha unapanga chumba unapata na goma la kupiga mikasi bure videm vyao ukivikuta kwenye hizo mall na ngeli zao za kuzugia unaweza sema mtu wa maana kumbe hata pa kulala tu shida lazma atoe mbunye ahifadhiwe....kule wanauza wake zao kwa wazungu wapate ka hela hawa nao wanagawa ndugu zao buree kwa ka chumba tu ka kujihifadhi
 
your really are a bongo lala arent you? what you trynna prove with that video? should i post the many videos of daresalaam flooding? didnt you use your reason and realize that daresalaam floods and there are videos of those floods?

oh i forgot tanzanians and the ability to apply reason are like oil and water.

we can do this all day if you want to

We jamaa si mshazimiwa stima zima simu yako save hio chaj had kesho mkiwashiwa tena
Middle class maisha ya kuungaunga
 
A day in the life of tenants in dense Nairobi estate

HighPix.jpg

Residential flats in Nairobi's Huruma estate. In such neighbourhoods, the use of electric iron boxes is banned purportedly due to their high electricity consumption rate. ROBERT NGUGI | NATION MEDIA GROUP



Martha Kilonzi, in her early 30s, has not met her landlord more than two months since she rented a single room in his flat.

Ms Kilonzi parts with $30 (Sh3,000) per month for the one-and-a-half by one-and-a-half-metre room in Nairobi’s densely populated Huruma estate.

According to her, a tenant in the ill-fated seven-floor flat that collapsed last week, the high rise building comprised 301 doors, or houses for that matter.

The Kenya Red Cross personnel who led the rescue and evacuation, however, disagree, putting the total occupancy at 198 households.

In these neighbourhoods, flats can go as high as 10 storeys, with each floor comprising up to 10 houses.

Wash dishes

Bathrooms and toilets are communal, usually located at the extreme end of the floor. One will usually find a shared sink, mostly used to wash dishes, located at the balcony.

Households vary in size, from single tenants to extended families of up to seven, never mind the fact that the size of the room remains uniform in most cases.

Because of their relative comfort, single tenants, especially bachelors, are viewed with a degree of envy by their neighbours who have larger families.

It is not unusual for neighbours to “send on loan” a member of their family to the single tenant nearby, at times leading to unplanned marriages.

In some cases, neighbours with large families will deliberately encourage their teenage relatives to befriend their bachelor neighbours as a “decongestion” strategy.

Varied in size

In Ms Kilonzi’s rather rare case, the houses on the doomed Huruma flat varied in size.

Because her unit was relatively smaller, her rent was $30 per month, as opposed to her “wealthier” neighbours who paid as much as $45 (Sh4,500) to enjoy the comfort of more spacious rooms.

“Electricity was seriously rationed, the agent would switch it on in the early evening, usually at 7pm (+3GMT), just to allow us to prepare supper and watch television for those who could afford it. He would switch it off at 10.30pm on the dot, high-school-style,” she says.

Because of the tight restrictions on electricity and the fact that most houses on the flats lack windows to let in natural light, it is not uncommon to encounter tenants using torches or cheap mobile phones, better known as mulika mwizi, to find their way around the buildings even during daytime.

Wiring system

In these neighbourhoods, be it Huruma, Kariobangi, Dandora, Kayole or Dagoretti, the use of electric iron boxes is banned, purportedly due to their high electricity consumption rate.

Landlords in most cases will ensure the electricity wiring system is installed in such a way that it automatically switches off whenever one tries to switch the electric iron box on.

The option for most families is to invest in charcoal iron boxes or take their clothes to the numerous dhobis (makeshift laundries) scattered within the neighbourhoods.

Because of the insecurity in most of these densely populated low-end areas, people prefer living on the upper floors.

“By the time robbers reach your floor, the alarm would definitely have been raised. Thieves here prefer the lower floors,” says a long-term resident of a flat in Huruma, who did not want to be named.

Lower floors

The lower floors, too, have their advantages. For one, it is easier to move into houses and, more importantly, it is much easier to move out bulky household items like sofa sets during times of disaster.

Cleaning of shared facilities such as bathrooms, toilets or dish washing areas is a shared responsibility.

The women on each floor usually draw up the duty roster, and also enforce compliance by reporting uncooperative tenants to the agent for disciplinary action, which can be as drastic as eviction.

Quarrels are commonplace in these buildings. The source of the quarrels will range from one’s husband or child overstaying in the communal bathroom or toilet, one’s laundry occupying most of the clothes hanging line, or even the theft of one’s undergarments from the line.

The bottom

Every so often, some of the tenants have to act as arbitrators.

But for Kenyans near the bottom of the economic pyramid — who consider themselves lucky to escape from slums — neighbourhoods such as Huruma become the better option.

For one, everything goes in Huruma and similar areas. Essential goods such as maize flour, sugar, salt, cooking fat, kerosene and even washing detergents are sold in the smallest quantities.

With as little as $0.3 (Sh30), it is possible for a family of four – man, wife, a child and a house-help, usually a close relative, to have a “decent” meal of ugali, sukuma wiki (kales) and a sprinkling of chicken heads or matumbo (offals).

Source: A day in the life of tenants in dense Nairobi estate
Hahaha.... Are you getting this news now. You guys are so behind.
 
We jamaa si mshazimiwa stima zima simu yako save hio chaj had kesho mkiwashiwa tena
Middle class maisha ya kuungaunga

Wenye kumiliki maghorofa hawana maana kabisa Kenya, yaani mpangaji mapemaaa saa mbili usiku tayari wanakuzimia umeme mpaka kesho yake utumie kibatari au simu ya kitochi na simu lazima uzime kuhifadhi chaji !
 
Wenye kumiliki maghorofa hawana maana kabisa Kenya, yaani mpangaji mapemaaa saa mbili usiku tayari wanakuzimia umeme mpaka kesho yake utumie kibatari au simu ya kitochi na simu lazima uzime kuhifadhi chaji !
Noma sana shida na wenyewe wakiachiwa ubahili juu hawatalipa
 
Noma sana shida na wenyewe wakiachiwa ubahili juu hawatalipa
Sasa tujiulize watu kama hawa ambao ndiyo wengi Nairobi, wataweza kweli kwenda ''kujirusha'' na dolphins au shoppings katika Malls.
 
Sasa tujiulize watu kama hawa ambao ndiyo wengi Nairobi, wataweza kweli kwenda ''kujirusha'' na dolphins au shoppings katika Malls.
Watajazana tu huko hamna kiingilio ila wanunuzi ni mabwana zao wazungu na wageni wengine na kale ka asilimia kadogo ka wakenya wanaojiweza hao wengine siku ikiisha ni kurudi home kula avocado na githeri badae waje kutoa pov jf simu ikiisha chaj akalale kwa jirani
 
Watajazana tu huko hamna kiingilio ila wanunuzi ni mabwana zao wazungu na wageni wengine na kale ka asilimia kadogo ka wakenya wanaojiweza hao wengine siku ikiisha ni kurudi home kula avocado na githeri badae waje kutoa pov jf simu ikiisha chaj akalale kwa jirani
Ha ! Ha! si bure naona wenyewe wapo kimyaa kumbe wamelazimishwa kulala mapema.
 
Ha ! Ha! si bure naona wenyewe wapo kimyaa kumbe wamelazimishwa kulala mapema.

Huruma is in MATHARE SLUMS right at the centre so tuna cheka ujinga wenu hatuwalengi hatuoni haja ya majibizano - mlipo sema middle class kila mtu akajitoa ama hauku notice... Kujibizana nanyi not counter productive.... Hamuezi kuelewa so no need... Soothe your egos all yu want Everyone knows Nairobi is by far the best city out of SA in sub Saharan Africa so we are already there!!!!
 
I'm so sick and tired of hearing childish and insecure people bracing about their country being better. What is it that 254 has against 255? Please let's put this obsession on the table and operate on it once and for all.
 
I'm so sick and tired of hearing childish and insecure people bracing about their country being better. What is it that 254 has against 255? Please let's put this obsession on the table and operate on it once and for all.

Simply put why are Tanzanians on the Kenyan side of the forum????

Insecure much???

Tanzanians are insecure!!!!...
 
Huruma is in MATHARE SLUMS right at the centre so tuna cheka ujinga wenu hatuwalengi hatuoni haja ya majibizano - mlipo sema middle class kila mtu akajitoa ama hauku notice... Kujibizana nanyi not counter productive.... Hamuezi kuelewa so no need... Soothe your egos all yu want Everyone knows Nairobi is by far the best city out of SA in sub Saharan Africa so we are already there!!!!

Sawa tunajua wewe ni mmoja wa wale wachache ambao hamna maisha magumu wala kulazimishwa kulala mapema kwa kukatiwa stima na wenye nyumba, na ndiyo maana tunaweza ''kufahamiana'' hapa Jamiiforums tukabadilishana mawazo na kuweka mambo sawa.
 
Don't just answer without evidence. 254 has always been known to have an obsession and grudges both politically and socially with 255, and that's a fact. Even when I was in Nairobi sometime back I was constantly discriminated. I don't see that in Tanzania towards Kenyans. Seriously speaking Kenyans have to end this nonsense. And I have come to discover that it's the men who are insecure. There has to be a hidden reason. I wish I could know it.
 
Simply put why are Tanzanians on the Kenyan side of the forum????

Insecure much???

Tanzanians are insecure!!!!...
Kenyan side of the forum??? Hujishangai upo kwa forum ambayo ni ya wa tz kwani umeona kwa forum zenu huko kuna wabongo wanahangaika kuja na kujikomba huko??
Umbea wenu na kukosa cha kufanya ndo kinachowafanya mje huku kuhangaika tu kama mnatafuta mabwana na msidhani hii ni twitter ama fb huko mnapokaaga kulialia tu....mnakimbizwa huko na matusi ya wajaluo yanawashinda mnajifanya kuja huku kuleta shombo zenu rudini hukohuko mkatukanane kama mlivyozoeana msitake kujileta huku na kutafuta pa kuonekana
 
Huruma is in MATHARE SLUMS right at the centre so tuna cheka ujinga wenu hatuwalengi hatuoni haja ya majibizano - mlipo sema middle class kila mtu akajitoa ama hauku notice... Kujibizana nanyi not counter productive.... Hamuezi kuelewa so no need... Soothe your egos all yu want Everyone knows Nairobi is by far the best city out of SA in sub Saharan Africa so we are already there!!!!
Mnawakana wenzenu hao nao si ni wakenya au middle class ipo kwa wataifa gani au rangi gani
 
Don't just answer without evidence. 254 has always been known to have an obsession and grudges both politically and socially with 255, and that's a fact. Even when I was in Nairobi sometime back I was constantly discriminated. I don't see that in Tanzania towards Kenyans. Seriously speaking Kenyans have to end this nonsense. And I have come to discover that it's the men who are insecure. There has to be a hidden reason. I wish I could know it.
Hao ndo maboya madem zao hawana uboya kama wao ndo mana wanawatandikaga tu vidume havijielewi viko vinatafuta shari tu kama vimekosa wakuwakuna
 
Don't just answer without evidence. 254 has always been known to have an obsession and grudges both politically and socially with 255, and that's a fact. Even when I was in Nairobi sometime back I was constantly discriminated. I don't see that in Tanzania towards Kenyans. Seriously speaking Kenyans have to end this nonsense. And I have come to discover that it's the men who are insecure. There has to be a hidden reason. I wish I could know it.
acha uongo bana, eti ulikuwa discriminated , the biggest joke of the year. Have you ever been to Gikomba, Machakos or Ongata rongai , if not make a point. Chaggas literally control the Gikomba market in Nairobi, they even have gangs there but noboby cares and here you are blubbing that kenyans hate tanzanians.
 
Tz stop this nonsense of posting on this thread irrelevancies.....stick to malls and the discussion and stop those pics yuv started diluting this thread or proceed to post nonsense on your threads.I personally have not posted nonsense on your threads,mkitaka kuenda huruma nendeni kule...
 
Tz stop this nonsense of posting on this thread irrelevancies.....stick to malls and the discussion and stop those pics yuv started diluting this thread or proceed to post nonsense on your threads.I personally have not posted nonsense on your threads,mkitaka kuenda huruma nendeni kule...
Whats yours around here mpangaji haweki sheria halaf nyie ndo wale wa mtu m1 akaunti 7 ngoja mtumbuliwe
 
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