The architect's first love was acting, and as a boy he led a theater troupe. But his parents said it was not a proper profession. " And then I realized that with architecture I could turn my dreams into reality."
His first major buildings were banks. "I wanted customers to see a vision of Africa in these buildings that would make them say: ' this is where I want to put my money ' ." Many of the structures have columns, which are not usually thought of as African. "But," says Goudiaby, "The Romans stole ideas from the Greeks, the Americans stole from the Europeans. Now it's our turn. I use whatever I want and make it African."
Recently, he's been busy in The Gambia, a country that until President Yayah Jammeh's military takeover in 1994 didn't have a structure taller than four storeys. Now his new 250- bed hospital in the bush town of Farafenni might be mistaken for Africa's first space station, while the international airport which opened in August looks like it could fly itself.