There is an old engineering joke: "Concrete doesn’t lie - but people sometimes help it keep secrets.” It is amusing until a building begins to whisper those secrets back. The decision to vacate the RDB Building is one such whisper.
ALSO READ: RDB Building temporarily closed over safety concerns
Not a collapse, but a warning - quiet, technical, and consequential. The most dangerous failures are the ones that politely ask you to leave. And when a building asks you to leave, you listen.
ALSO READ: Rwanda’s built environment at a crossroads: The law is passed, but the real work begins now
Picture a modern structure beside Parliament, reflecting Kigali’s ambition. Inside, it hosts institutions shaping Rwanda’s future; RDB, RHA, REMA, RMB, and the National Land Authority, among others. Outside, it projects confidence in progress. Then comes a simple instruction: vacate immediately. That is not merely a structural directive; it is a national signal. As President Paul Kagame reminds us, "We cannot build a prosperous nation on weak foundations.” Here, that truth becomes tangible.
A lesson from Shatin, Hong Kong, sharpens the point. Two buildings were demolished after most of their foundation piles were shortened or never built. They did not fail for lack of knowledge; they failed because systems allowed truth to be replaced with convenience. Rwanda is not being compared to that failure; it is being cautioned by it. Trust must be verified.
The RDB Building, as it is commonly known, is more than a structure; it is a public trust. When it is declared unsafe, the issue becomes systemic. It demands answers: Were designs faithfully executed? Were inspections independent? Were certifications grounded in reality? These are not accusations; they are obligations. As President Kagame has said, "Accountability is not about punishment. It is about responsibility.”
Repair is necessary, but not sufficient. Rwanda needs a credible, independent, and technically rigorous investigation to establish the root causes, led by the Institute of Engineering Rwanda and supported by academia and industry. In engineering, what is not investigated becomes repeated.
The deeper issue extends beyond a single building. Construction systems often concentrate roles in ways that create vulnerability. Design, execution, supervision, and certification can overlap, allowing small compromises to accumulate until failure is assembled piece by piece.
Rwanda must therefore move from reaction to prevention by embedding the frameworks of the Global Infrastructure Anti-Corruption Centre. Its Project Anti-Corruption System ensures that integrity is built into projects from inception, monitored continuously, and enforced through transparency - so that what is designed is what is built, and what is built is what is certified.
At the same time, Rwanda should institutionalise independent private compliance inspectors - professionals outside the delivery chain who verify adherence to master plans, building codes, and structural integrity requirements. They are not obstacles; they are guardians, because every building ultimately belongs to the public.
Rwanda has the advantage of discipline - and discipline can be designed. Through strong professional regulatory bodies, alignment with global standards such as those of the World Federation of Engineering Organizations, and collaboration among government, academia, and industry, compliance can become a culture. Doing the right thing must not depend on who is watching.
The RDB Building is therefore not a story of failure; it is a leadership opportunity. A moment to choose reform over reaction and integrity over convenience. Because buildings do not fail suddenly; they fail after systems have quietly chosen not to listen. Rwanda has heard the message. What happens next will determine whether this moment becomes merely a warning - or a legacy built on truth.
The writer is a professional engineer and an entrepreneur.