With its red walls and purple, yellow and red awnings, this is a design that few Americans in Cotonou, the quiet economic capital of Benin, are the ones that are likely to lose.
And here’s the point. The bright colors of the Seme-One center, designed to be a birthplace for generation researchers and entrepreneurs, “awaken the senses and stimulate beyond proper innovation,” said Abdoul Halim Asouma, in relation to design work.
The masons and painters have given the finishing touches to the building, which is the length of a hypermerposition. Photo: AFP / Yanick Folly
Freemasons and painters give the finishing touches to the 4250 square meter (45,750 square foot) design, a hoax roughly corresponding to a hypermarket position, which seeks to be flexible in use, low power consumption and parenting, skill and networking ideas.
The site is a component of Seme-City, a task that Preaspectnt Patrice Talon hopes will help transform its small West African country into a regionally generation hotspot like Kenya or Rwanda in the other aspect of the continent.
The center has been housed for 2 years in locations adjacent to the presidential department, such as a student center, researchers, developers, giant and small business leaders, and others who can paint there and attend conferences.
Seme-One’s marketing specialists have developed X-over, a cell phone app that tracks the chain of contacts made through an inflamed coronavirus Photo: AFP / Yanick Folly
For its director Claude Borna, Seme-City is “an exclusive position for best friends that supports and trains tomorrow and promotes innovation made in Africa”.
Borna studied in Los Angeles and Montreal, and worked for foreign corporations as a representative of innovation and business strategy before returning to Benin in 2016.
“People turn to potential colleagues, schools and support from Seme-City,” borna, in his 40s.
Habib Meme is an opescore in the design of cellular medical services temporarily erected or dismantled in the design of an outbreak Photo: AFP / Yanick Folly
“Other young Americans are full of concepts but lack framework and support.”
Benin’s new economic capital medium is designed to be a birthplace for researchers and marketing specialists from generation Photo: AFP / Yanic Folly
The spread of COVID-1 pandemic nine in Benin makes new concepts welcome, and most importantly, its early implementation.
With the economic resources of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in Benin, five national and foreign organizations have set up a working group to discern tactics to combat the virus, based on the resources and needs of West Africa.
Donald Tchaou, 29, and five of his friends have developed X-over, an app that encourages social estrangement and tracks the chain of contacts made through an inflamed person.
Aleven, although never the only program of its kind, the design of the application in Benin saves coins and strengthens local data.
Habib Meme, architect, worked with engineers and computer scientists to expand a task called COM-Finement, to temporarily erect or dismantle cellular medical services as part of an epidemic.
The facilities are remotely connected and connected to doctors who can provide remote experience.
In Seme-City, “they referred us to potential economic donors and to us with their very applicable technical feedback,” Meme said.
His innovation has convinced several governments in West Africa and the prototypes are in the intellectual experimental phase, he said.
The development of new projects and the launch of start-uplaystation require only funds, but also a partner association and a wisdom of marketing, legislation and regulations.
Armelle Dossa, 25, a specialist in agricultural generation, is an opescore in a task to market biological vegetables.
“If this framework had existed in Benin 10 years ago, we can also prefer the big young apple sellers and minimize the unemployment rate,” he said.