Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Monday, Oct 29, 2007
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version

Clasic Farm

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Real Estate & Construction
Industry & Economy - Real Estate & Construction
Companies seek foreign architects for standout designs

BUILDING TRENDS

N. Ramakrishnan

Changing style: Construction in progress at the IT Park being built by Tata Consultancy Services at Siruseri, near Chennai. The building has been designed by Carlos Ott and Carlos Ponce de Leon of Uruguay. —

R. Balaji
N. Ramakrishnan

Chennai, Oct. 28 From buildings that were functional to ones that are unique and make a design statement. This is the change that is happening across the country in the hundreds of buildings — commercial, office or residential — that are coming up.

Look closely and you might not be surprised to see foreign architects associated with designing a number of these buildings. Most often, this is in association with a local architect. The tasks are clearly divided — the foreign architect deals with the concept design after which the local architect takes over.

There are several reasons for companies choosing foreign architects over local ones. One, the size of the buildings being constructed, especially in the information technology sector, is much bigger.

When till recently a 1 million sq ft building was considered the norm, companies like Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys Technologies are going in for IT parks that are spread over 3-5 million sq ft. Indian architects do not have much experience in designing and working on such large buildings.

Interest lure

Two, information technology companies want something different. Rather than have a typical box-like structure, they prefer buildings that stand out from the crowd — one that will make a statement for itself and also make it interesting for employees to want to work out of that building.

“We wanted something unique,” says Mr N. Chandrasekaran, Executive Director & Chief Operating Officer, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd, when asked why the company went in for a Uruguayan architect for its Chennai software development centre. TCS’ IT special economic zone at Siruseri, on Chennai’s IT corridor, has been designed by Mr Carlos Ott in association with Carlos Ponce de Leon, of Uruguay. The local architect for this project is Mr C.R. Narayana Rao, a Chennai-based architect firm with over 60 years standing in the industry.

Diversity needs

It is this desire to have something different that is spurring companies to opt for foreign architects, says Mr C.N. Raghavendran, Partner, C.R. Narayana Rao.

His firm has tied up with Nikken Sekkei, a Japanese architecture firm, one of the largest in the world, for designing the software development centre for Infosys Technologies at the Mahindra World City special economic zone, at Maraimalai Nagar, on the outskirts of Chennai.

Indian architects do not mind the large number of foreign architects working in India. After all, they get to learn and this association opens up the global market for them as well.

Foreign architects are more systematic, more focussed, and plan their work more thoroughly than their Indian counterparts, says Mr Raghavendran.

More Stories on : Real Estate & Construction | Real Estate & Construction

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



PNB Hiring

Stories in this Section
BSNL to hire cell towers from private operators


‘Global operations will nourish Jet’s domestic biz’
Rising rupee helps some companies shore up profits
Insurers put riders on corporate health covers
No point in staying with a laggard for far too long
ONGC lines up Rs 7,750 cr to revamp onshore assets
Ratnagiri Gas equity structure in for change
Today's Pick: Nestle India (Rs 1331.95)
Day trading guide
Nokia Siemens, Qualcomm differ on mobile TV tech
Companies seek foreign architects for standout designs
NComputing sees huge market here for terminals
Job-hoppers not counted out by TCS
Gold vulnerable to short-term correction
Role and risks of sovereign wealth funds
Cues from RBI, US Fed keenly watched
Video conferencing becoming the norm
Green signal for triple-stacks on diesel routes


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2007, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line