3
June
2015

New Building Open House Welcomed Public to WMU

On 30 May, approximately 350 people attended a public open house to view the recently inaugurated WMU building.  Several WMU students and staff were present to facilitate the open house, and the WMU student choir enhanced the event by singing the WMU song prior to the start of each tour. The Project Architect, Tyrone Cobcroft of Cobcroft Architects, and his colleague, Rodrigo Velázquez Bernabéu of Terroir Architects, led guided tours for the visitors approximately every 30 minutes and provided extraordinary insight to the design of the new facility. WMU Associate Professor, Dr. Michael Baldauf, and Research Assistant, Raza Mehdi, were available in the Maritime Risk and System Safety (MaRiSa) Lab and provided a presentation and simulator demonstration about work carried out in the lab. Willing participants had the opportunity to try out the simulator.

WMU relocated on 13 April to the splendid new facilities that provide the opportunity to work and learn in a state-of-the-art academic environment. Thanks to the generosity of the City of Malmö, WMU now occupies a multi-purpose academic complex offering almost 6,000m2, of assignable area. This will allow the M.Sc. and Ph.D. programs to grow, alongside the Professional Development Course portfolio, and enable WMU to host international conferences at the University, substantially expanding the WMU’s service to the global maritime community.

The extraordinary new home for WMU would not have been possible without the generous support of WMU’s host country, Sweden, and particularly the University’s host city, Malmö. Malmö provided WMU with the landmark Old Harbour Master’s building as an incredible starting point, and then selected a dramatic extension wing by the renowned Danish architect Kim Utzon in collaboration with the Australian architecture firm of Terroir Architects.

The new extension serves as an "urban hinge" between the historic city and the docklands. The eastern and southern facades of Tornhuset retain their original character and form part of the historic fabric of the city, while the new part of the projects responds to the brand-new Malmö Live project, made up of a congress centre, a concert hall and hotel, and to the other surrounding contemporary developments.

Related Documents
No items found.
Dissertation title
Deniece M. Aiken
Jamaica
Maritime Governance: Contextual Factors affecting Implementation of IMO Instruments
Anas S. Alamoush
Jordan
The Transition to low and near zero carbon emission ports: Extent and Determinants
Kristie Alleyne
Barbados
Spatiotemporal Analyses of Pelagic Sargassum: Biodiversity, Morphotypes and Arsenic Content
Kristal Ambrose
Bahamas
Contextual Barriers Facing Caribbean SIDS in the Global Governance of Plastic Pollution. Assessing the need for harmonized marine debris monitoring and contextual equity to support participation in the global plastics treaty negotiations by Caribbean SIDS
Ajay Deshmukh
India
Hinterland Connectivity and Market Share. A case of Indian Container Ports
Roxanne Graham
Grenada
Combatting the Marine Litter Crisis in the Windward Islands: Examining Source-to-Sea Pathways and Fostering Multi-Scale Solutions
Tricia Lovell
Trinidad and Tobago
The Problem of Abandoned, Lost and otherwise Discarded Fishing Gear (ALDFG) in Eastern Caribbean Small-Scale Fisheries. Understanding the Challenges, Defining Solutions
Renis Auma Ojwala
Kenya
Gender equality in ocean science for sustainable development
Yingfeng Shao
China
Harmonisation in the Rules Governing the Recognition of Foreign Judicial Ship Sales
Seyedvahid Vakili
Iran
The Development of a Systematic, Holistic and Transdisciplinary Energy Management Framework to Promote Environmentally Sustainable Shipyards