Festac Town, originally referred to as "Festival Town" or "Festac Village", is a residential estate designed to house the participants of the Second
World Festival of Black Arts and Culture of 1977 (Festac77). Consisting of 5,000 contemporary dwelling units and seven major avenues, the town was designed in an efficient grid in order to accommodate upwards of 45,000 visitors as well as any Nigerian employees and officers working at the Festival. The Nigerian government invested substantial sums of money and resources into building Festac Town, which sported state of the art electrical generators, police and fire stations, access to public transportation, supermarkets, banks, health centres, public restrooms, and postal services. The village was therefore intended to evoke the modern age and the promise of state-sponsored economic development fuelled by oil revenues. In 2005, Robyn Dixon of the
Los Angeles Times, while discussing
advance-fee scams, known as 419 in Nigeria, stated that Festac Town was "at the center of the cyber-scam universe." The
Associated Press wrote that year that the community "has become notorious for" 419, and that it was a place "where the scammers ply their schemes". == Layout ==