KEJA was born from a question I couldn’t stop asking: why, after decades of extraordinary African creative output, did our makers still lack the infrastructure to grow into sustainable, commercially viable businesses? I co-founded KEJA with fellow space-maker Nitha Karanja — urbanist, Future-of-Work expert, and one of the most rigorous thinkers I know. She brings the spatial intelligence and development expertise; I bring sixteen years of building creative ecosystems from the inside out. Together, we are designing Africa’s first purpose-built creative campus — a dense, walkable urban home for creative entrepreneurs across film, fashion, gaming, and music, on 3.1 acres in central Nairobi. KEJA is not a co-working space or a cultural centre. It is infrastructure — conceived to launch African creators into commercial success and meaningful, long-term scale.