Mapping Space Without Sight: Inside SEAlab’s Sensory Architecture

Mapping Space Without Sight: Inside SEAlab’s Sensory Architecture
School for Blind and Visually Impaired Children / SEAlab. Image © Bhagat Odedara School for Blind and Visually Impaired Children / SEAlab. Image © Bhagat Odedara

Founded in 2015 in Ahmedabad by Anand Sonecha, SEAlab is a practice shaped by a slow, contemplative engagement with place, proportion, and participation. Recognized as one of the winners of the ArchDaily 2025 Next Practices Awards, the studio builds with simple materials and local techniques, pursuing environments that are experienced as much as they are seen. This ethos became particularly tangible in Gandhinagar, where the School for Blind and Visually Impaired Children did not begin as a purpose-built institution. The school had been operating from an existing primary school building, with classrooms stacked above dormitories and twelve children sharing a single room. Space was limited, and so were growth opportunities. The new academic building was required to expand capacity, improve living conditions, and support greater student independence.

Read more »