1. I wish they did less talking and showed more of the house. Story mingi bila views of the house and details on how she acquired it gets boring after the first few minutes of listening to it.
2. The move out of Nairobi for all who want to get ahead by owning their own home is inevitable as this Nairobi bred lady's story shows. A few weeks back one of these property shows also highlighted a lady born and raised in Nairobi who moved to Nakuru and built a lovely huge maisonette there. She was raving about how she does not deal with traffic issues, cost of living is cheaper etc. This move out of Nairobi should not surprise anyone in a developing economy with a red hot economy growing at 5%+ per year. As the middle class booms it inevitably fans out to places that fit its pocket and standards of living expected. If you grew up in Lavington, for example, what are the chances that unless you are a drug dealer or seed of "old money" (as Wukan proudly claims

) you can afford to buy a
500m kshs bungalow with huge garden to live there in? Not happening any time soon. The logical thing is to move to a place like
Jewel in the Crown (Kitengela) buy a 1/4 acre and build a lovely maisonette that preserves your standard of living but at a pocket friendly price. As hundreds of thousands of fellow middle classers do so, they create new "Lavingtons" in DC, Nyeri, Nakuru, Ruiru, Naivasha, etc etc, and where the middle class moves to, the corporates also follow and so do government services (eventually) due to the economic power and clout of this group.
3. This trend also mirrors what has happened in western countries with regards to the "inner cities." The affluent fan out of the older core of the city and build beautiful new suburbs that they either commute from to work or live and work in. Unfortunately this leads to urban blight and deterioration of neighbourhoods within the city's core as the middle classes leave and the core becomes more commercialised. We are already having glimpses of this with Ngara and Kariakor which used to be elite middle class areas in the 60s but are now becoming urban eyesores if they aren't so already, despite the prime locations they inhabit. I hope these areas will not become
"the Hillbrows" of Nairobi. This is why I say DC is the future. It's a no brainer really. SGR 4 stations, roads being built like crazy, houses coming up like weeds and those who want to secure their future permanently are either there or on their way there. Nobody wants to live in cramped apartments in Nairobi for the rest of their life. You need space for your totos to do somersaults in the back yard fuaa. A stand alone maisonette and lifestyle in the suburbs is the new
Kenyan dream IMHO.
Ni hayo maoni yangu tu!