Avenor Ikoyi I
A standalone home set back from the road. The garden runs to the wall; the kitchen runs the length of the house. The first home Avenor took.
Eight, across four neighbourhoods. By design.
Avenor opens with eight homes, drawn from four neighbourhoods of Lagos. The network is small because the standard is set high. New homes open at the pace the brand can hold to its own care.
The homes belong to one of two collections. The standard collection is the network's working base — the homes a member uses most often, reliable, well-kept, everywhere a member needs to be. The flagship collection is the network at its fullest: homes in the most settled neighbourhoods, chosen for quiet as much as for address, held to the network's highest standard of furnishing and provisioning. Neither is a ranking. They are two kinds of home, for two kinds of stay.
Below, the flagship collection first, then the standard collection. Each home has its character. Each is set out by name, neighbourhood, and the briefest of details — enough to picture, not enough to compromise.
Three homes, in two neighbourhoods. Each is held to the same standard. None of them are alike.
A standalone home set back from the road. The garden runs to the wall; the kitchen runs the length of the house. The first home Avenor took.
An apartment on the water side of the island. Light all day, quiet by night. Accessible from where members work and meet for business.
A four-bedroom house on a quiet street. Whole-home stays only. For weeks where the work is at home and the people are with you.
Five homes, in three neighbourhoods. The working base of Avenor — the homes most members use most of the time.
A two-bedroom apartment in a quiet building. The kind of home a member returns to for a working week.
Close to the boundary of the island. An apartment for the member who works between Lekki and Ikoyi.
A three-bedroom with a separate study. For the member who works from home as often as not.
A one-bedroom on the calmer end of the island. For solo stays of any length.
A two-bedroom in a building with a pool. Closer to the beach end of Lekki Phase 1.
Every home in the network meets the same baseline. Fibre that works. A kitchen that is properly stocked. A bed that is properly made. A bathroom that is properly fitted. A working call line. A real key — or a real code that opens a real lock. None of this varies by collection. It is the floor.
Above the floor, the homes vary. A flagship home is in a neighbourhood chosen for its quiet; a standard home is in a neighbourhood chosen for its accessibility. A flagship home is furnished to a higher standard; a standard home is furnished to a working standard. Both are kept to the same care. The difference between them is what they offer at their best, not what they assure at their baseline.
About the addresses: this page names homes by their neighbourhood, with a Roman numeral where the network has more than one in the same place — Avenor Ikoyi I, Avenor Lekki II. The specific addresses are member-only. A member sees them on logging in; a visitor sees them when they become a member. This is a discretion principle, not a marketing one. The brand does not surface identifying detail publicly — for the homes' security, and for the members'.
Once a member joins, the page changes shape. The neighbourhood becomes a street. The placeholder description becomes a description of the actual home. The photography reflects what the member will actually find. None of that depends on the member's tier. Every member who logs in sees every home, fully.
Eight homes is what the network is today. Four neighbourhoods, two collections, one standard underneath. If that fits the shape of how you use the city, the next step is to choose a tier — or, if you already know which tier, to apply. The first response is a conversation, not a contract.