Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs

Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs

Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 3 of 24Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 4 of 24Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 5 of 24Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 7 of 24Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - More Images+ 19

Pune, India
  • Architect In Charge: Christopher Benninger
  • Design Team: Daraius Choksi, Harsh Manrao, Shivaji Karekar, Akshay Modhak, Sujit Kothiwale, Neha Kothiwale, Shalaka Vaidya, Kshitija Parmar, Madhvi Bhuradia, Noel Jerald, Er. Rahul Sathe
  • Cost: US$ 15.3 million
  • Client: Balaji Singh Teeka, Executive Ship Management Pte Ltd.
  • City: Pune
  • Country: India
More SpecsLess Specs
Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 1 of 24
© A. Ramprasad Naidu

Text description provided by the architects. The Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies (SIMS) near Mumbai was established by Executive Ship Management (ESM) Pte. Singapore, to fulfill its new vision of an industry driven by environmental protection, safety and efficiency. Realizing that it must drive this mission through human resources it embarked on the creation of a sophisticated state of the art, world class green campus where the full range of pre-sea and post-sea studies can be imparted.

Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 2 of 24
© A. Ramprasad Naidu

The campus, which was completed in 2007, houses 480 cadets. Photovoltaic cells, both translucent and opaque, become modern-day Indian ‘jaalis,’ allowing natural light while blocking heat. The three hundred feet long photovoltaic solar wall in the Maritime Workshop produces 60 KW of electricity. Clear glass on the north façade brings in natural light, giving the testing equipment and machinery all-round, energy free illumination and ventilation. The Administration Building cleverly exploits northern light through its wavy glass atrium wall, while generating electricity through the grand photovoltaic south-facing façade that produces 30 KW of electricity. All buildings have natural illumination, cutting consumption of non-renewable energy.

Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 3 of 24
© A. Ramprasad Naidu

Solar panels provide the entire heated water requirement, using hot water tanks held above the hostel roofs from water tanks above the circular stairs. These seemingly frivolous shapes are integrated within a functional system of water management. The twenty eight meter tall central tank is vertically divided into four stages, with the raw bore well water progressively purified as it reaches the topmost tank, from where it is gravity distributed to the entire campus. Two bio-sewerage treatment plants recycle grey water to the gardens. Aluminum louvers in the long Hostel and curved Academic Building allow natural ventilation and day light, while blocking India’s fierce sun,  thereby acting as a passive air conditioning system. 

Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 4 of 24
© A. Ramprasad Naidu

Efficiency, Environment and Safety were the three calling cards the company decided to promote through campus design, moving from words to practice through training and on-board operations and monitoring. This has  proved a sound business strategy in the new millennium as massive shipping disasters, polluting vast waterways, resulted in extensive environmental damage and costly litigation. ESM was amongst the first to realize the future lay in safety and environmental protection. It saw training as the single most effective tool to turn the industry around! Walking the talk on environmental sustainability and safety, the SIMS green campus supported ESM’s great leap forward in the shipping industry.

Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 5 of 24
© A. Ramprasad Naidu

Learning in a sustainable, green campus that is one hundred percent water self-sufficient; using natural day light; achieving all water heating through solar panels; cutting air-conditioning costs in limited areas by 34% thorough protective louvers; having one of the largest photovoltaic wall in Asia and producing 60 KW per hour of energy through daily renewable energy techniques gives the candidates a first hand understanding of the possibilities of sustainable energy! 

Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs - Image 22 of 24
Elevation, Section & Plan

Project gallery

See allShow less
About this office
Cite: "Samundra Institute of Maritime Studies / CCBA Designs" 23 Jan 2013. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/322944/samundra-institute-of-maritime-studies-christopher-charles-benninger-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.