Built for FESTAC ’77 and now known as the Wole Soyinka Centre for Culture and the Creative Arts, the National Theatre has been photographed from almost every angle imaginable over the past five decades. What interested me in this view was not the building itself, but what was happening around it.
In the drone footage, a Lagos Blue Line train moves towards Marina and back to the station beside the theatre. For a brief moment, two symbols of different eras of Lagos occupied the same frame.
One was built as a national cultural landmark. The other was built to move people through Africa’s largest city.
The National Theatre has long stood as one of Nigeria’s most recognizable buildings. Generations of Nigerians have attended performances, film screenings, exhibitions, conferences and public events within its walls. It has witnessed periods of prominence, decline and renewal while remaining a fixture on the Lagos skyline.




The Blue Line represents a different chapter in the city’s story. Every day, it carries thousands of passengers(six million in the last two years) between the island and the mainland, connecting communities and reshaping how people move through Lagos.
Viewed from above, the relationship between the two is striking. The theatre remains the dominant landmark, but it no longer stands alone. The railway now forms part of the landscape around it, introducing movement into a scene that for decades was defined by a single structure.
A city is not built all at once. It takes shape gradually—one project, one journey and one generation at a time.

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