Plaza The institute has its main campus in
Ahmedabad, with additional satellite campuses in
Gandhinagar and
Bengaluru. The creation of four additional NIDs was suggested as part of the central government's 2007 National Design Policy.
Main campus, Ahmedabad After the Eameses presented
The India Report,
Gira and
Gautam Sarabhai, in consultation with other notable architects and designers, felt that Ahmedabad, not Bangaluru or Fatehpur Sikri, as the Eameses had suggested, was the most suitable site given its architecture and textile hotspots, and should be the institute's primary location. The main campus in Paldi, Ahmedabad, offers both undergraduate and postgraduate courses in design across several disciplines.
Conception Initially operational out of the Calico Mills complex loaned from the
Sarabhai family, it moved to the Sanskar Kendra, a building designed by
Le Corbusier. Eventually Seth Chinubhai Chimanlal offered a vast expanse of land for the NID campus for a token fee of one Indian rupee. The buildings, as per Charles Eames, were to be "un-monumental, anonymous, unpretentious, pleasant, workable and non-shoddy". Gautam and Gira Sarabhai worked on the building plan for NID in consultation with various architects, engineers and designers. It was meant to be a modern experiment and its underlying philosophy was that the problems of architecture, structural design and construction techniques should be resolved integrally. The Sarabhais said that the two qualities that resonated deeply with the architecture are the Bauhaus aesthetic and modern sensibility.
Planning and construction The building is constructed on stilts. The ground floor was utilized as a public area with common rooms and a canteen as storage for raw materials. Workshops and laboratories were on the first floor. Workshops for photography, wood, metal, plastics, ceramics and glass were given separate wings. All wings were connected to the core building. Drafting studios, seminar rooms and the library were on the second floor. Double glazing between the studios and the workshops enabled students to observe the proceedings on the production floors without being disturbed by machines. Classroom spaces at NID are modular and transparent, which the principals said emphasised NID's core philosophy of "learning by doing".
PG and R&D Campus, Bengaluru An additional extension campus for NID was later planned to be built at Yeshwantpur, a suburb in northwestern
Bengaluru. The new campus was built for IN₹ 7.5 crores and was inaugurated on 31 March 2006 by Dr. Darlie O'Koshy, who was the executive director of NID at the time. The 'PG and Research & Development campus' of NID houses additional facilities for industrial development and design research, and offers doctoral courses in design as well as postgraduate courses in many disciplines.
Gira Sarabhai Square inside the NID building. Named after the founders of the institution. == Admissions ==