KEY POINTS
- Alakija hospital donation Osun delivers a 250 bed teaching facility.
- The $23 million project targets healthcare and medical training.
- Advanced equipment positions it as a regional referral center.
Nigeria’s richest woman, Folorunso Alakija, says she designed the $23 million medical research and training hospital she donated to Osun State University to meet two inseparable goals: saving lives and training the next generation of doctors.
In a recent LinkedIn post, Alakija described the project as the fulfilment of a commitment made years ago rather than a one off philanthropic gesture. She recalled that construction began seven years earlier with what she called “a prayer and a vision” to build a hospital that would strengthen medical education while expanding access to quality healthcare in southwestern Nigeria.
The comments followed the formal handover of the Modupe and Folorunso Alakija Medical Research and Training Hospital to the university earlier this week, marking a milestone in one of the largest privately funded healthcare projects linked to a Nigerian public institution.
Alakija hospital donation Osun marks milestone
Billionaires Africa report says the 250 bed facility will function as Osun State University’s main teaching hospital and serve patients from across the state and neighboring regions. It includes 20 clinical departments and five non clinical units, supported by a community health center, maternity and neonatal wards, diagnostic and research laboratories, and four operating theaters.
Advanced equipment installed at the hospital includes CT and MRI scanners, ultrasound and X-ray suites, radiotherapy facilities and intensive care units, alongside specialist services such as ophthalmology. University officials say the scale and scope of the complex position it as one of the most comprehensive teaching hospitals in the region.
Alakija said the handover represents the beginning of a longer responsibility rather than the end of her involvement. She further described the hospital as a place where “knowledge will grow, lives will be healed, and new generations of medical professionals will be trained to serve humanity.”
Alakija hospital donation Osun extends legacy
At 74, Alakija serves as vice chair of Famfa Oil, an exploration company that holds a major stake in Nigeria’s Agbami offshore oilfield and operates it in partnership with Chevron and other international firms.
She began her career in 1974 as a secretary at the Sijuwade Group, where early exposure to corporate leadership shaped her business path.
With a net worth exceeding $1 billion, Alakija has increasingly focused on education and healthcare, arguing that institutions, not headlines, define lasting impact.


