Construction of The National Theatre was started by the military regime of General
Yakubu Gowon and completed during the military regime of
Olusegun Obasanjo. By the year 2021, this edifice had been run by a number of management teams with heads such as Jimmy Folorunso Atte (1991 – August 1999), Prof Babafemi A. Osofisan (2000 – 2004), Dr. Ahmed Parker Yerima (2006 – Aug 2009), Kabir Yusuf (2009 – 2016), George Ufot, (Late) Dr. (Mrs.) Stella Oyedepo,
Sunday Enessi Ododo (2020–2024), Akerele Tola (2024 to present) The National Theatre exterior was designed, shaped and built to look like a military hat. It originally has capacity for a 5,000-seat Main Hall with a collapsible stage, and two capacity cinema halls, all of which are equipped with facilities for simultaneous translation of 8 languages; among others. The National Theatre, Nigeria was designed and constructed by
Bulgarian construction company (Techno Exporstroy). Alhaji Sule Katagum was a co-owner and also their chairman. It resembles the
Palace of Culture and Sports in
Varna, Bulgaria (completed in 1968); the National Theatre Lagos, Nigeria, being the bigger of the two.
Renovation (2020–2025) The National Theatre renovation started in 2020 post-COVID through a joint collaboration with the government and private sector. The Bankers Committee is made up of banking institutions like Access Bank and Guarantee Trust Bank. The contractor for the renovation process was CAPPA D'ABERTO, who worked along with other subcontractors, like Nairda for electrical works, Zmirage for stage engineering, Filmhouse and SMO Contemporary Art for building curation, art preservation, and conservation works; SiSA for interior design of the main hall and lobby areas; YandT Designs for the interior spaces as well; and VACC for mechanical services. Major aspects of the renovation were finished in 2024, and the theater is expected to be opened sometime in 2025. A committee named SANEF was formed to supervise the activities of the restoration process.
Commissioning & Soyinka's acceptance On 1 October 2025, the fully renovated complex was officially commissioned and re-dedicated as the Wole Soyinka Centre for Culture and the Creative Arts during Nigeria's 65th Independence Day celebrations. In his address, Prof. Wole Soyinka explained that he accepted the renaming with "mixed feelings" because he has historically criticised the custom of naming public monuments after individuals. He said he once believed the theatre was beyond redemption and even joked that it should be blown up, but acknowledged that the Bankers' Committee's work made him "eat his words." He also recounted dangers posed by the building's disrepair (such as leaking roofs, exposed wiring, and risk to actors), and invoked nostalgia for the original FESTAC '77 era when the theatre first stood in glory. President Tinubu used the occasion to announce the establishment of a National Arts Theatre Endowment Fund to secure ongoing maintenance. == Design spaces ==