Counties free to use local materials under new building code
Rift Valley
By
David Njaaga
| Jul 05, 2025
Workers at a construction site in West Pokot. A new building code now allows counties to use local materials to cut costs and boost climate resilience.
Counties can now use local materials such as fluorspar, sand and cement in construction under a new building code aimed at cutting costs and supporting climate resilience.
The National Construction Authority (NCA) said the National Building Code, 2024, replaces outdated rules that blocked the use of local materials, limiting affordable and sustainable building.
“If a county has access to natural materials like fluorspar, sand or cement, they can now be used in compliance with the code. This inclusion will promote sustainability and affordability,” said NCA Board Chair Mercy Okiro during a sensitisation forum in Kapenguria, West Pokot.
The code also guides how to build access roads to buildings, place windows and doors and safely install gas cylinders in homes to improve safety and modernise construction.
READ MORE
Mbadi's Sh1tr domestic debt shocker in 2026-27 Budget
Growing economy fails to fill pockets and plates
New Year, old problem: Kenyans' struggle with high living cost persists
Tea volumes at auction dip in 2025
December inflation rate steadies at 4.5pc despite price hikes
Kenya in fresh push to harness deep-sea fishing potential
How banks can help to improve their customers' tax compliance
Equity boss on loans cost, Ethiopian expansion and 2026 outlook
Troubling skies: Inside the surge in aircraft crashes
Turkana oil deal sparks concerns over skewed revenue sharing deal
“The Building Code 2024 is a milestone framework towards streamlining construction practices, enhancing safety and building resilience against climate-related risks,” added Okiro.
The sensitisation forum, part of the authority’s stakeholder education drive that has so far reached 18 counties, brought together contractors, regulators and policymakers to discuss the code’s impact on urban planning and sustainable construction.
The code replaces the Local Government (Adoptive ByLaws) Building Order of 1968, aligning construction standards with modern safety practices while backing local economies and climate adaptation efforts.