Sunday, 9 February 2014

Master plan for reviving Nalanda University

PTI
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A group of architecture students from Singapore have put together ideas for the reconstruction.

To its past glory:A file photo of the ancient Nalanda University.
To its past glory:A file photo of the ancient Nalanda University.
A group of architecture students here have drawn a master plan for the revival of ancient Nalanda University in India which had students from East Asia and China during its functional period from 5th Century CE to 1197 CE.
“We will present the draft plan to the Nalanda University directors later this year and hope to participate in the final competition for Nalanda campus master plan,” Ng Si Jia, the group leader of the architecture students from the National University of Singapore (NUS), told PTI.
Architecture students, researchers, academics and diplomats met yesterday at the Nalanda - Siriwijaya Centre at NUS to discuss and review the plan, ‘The Nalanda University: A Mother Plan for the 21st Century Campus'
The plan was put together by a group of 14 architecture students from China and includes two students from the Nanjing University of China who are in Singapore on a student exchange programme.
The modern building concept-based plan stresses on including local farming on the 150-ha of the 180-ha site to make it self-sufficient in food supplies and incorporating the contribution of the community within the vicinity as has been the case at the ancient centre when 200 villages supplied food to the campus residents.
The plan also emphasizes on inculcating local cultural, environmental and ecological elements in the campus though the revived university would draw international students, including from China, according to the presentation.
Singapore's top architect and NUS Adjunct Professor Tay Kheng Soon took the students on a week-long tour of India and visited the ruins of Nalanda in Bihar as well as the site for the new university. International students would join the Nalanda University, which was scheduled to be functional from 2013.
Singapore, India, China and Japan are leading the main sponsors for reconstructing the University, estimated to cost USD 1 billion.
More donations were being sought for the university project.PTI

  • The plan stresses on including local farming on the 150-ha of the 180-ha site to make it self-sufficient in food supplies.
  • Emphasises inculcating local cultural, environmental and ecological elements in the campus.


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