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Surat Diamond Bourse (SDB) is a diamond trade centre located in DREAM City in Surat, Gujarat, India, designed by the architecture firm Morphogenesis. It is the world's largest office complex with a floor space of 660,000 square metres (7,100,000 sq ft), as well as the world's largest office building.[9][10][11] The current Chairman is Govind Dholakia and CEO of Surat Diamond Bourse is Mahesh Gadhavi.

Key Information

History

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The SDB project was launched by the former Chief Minister of Gujarat, Anandiben Patel, after the laying the foundation stone for the construction of the complex, as well as of the Diamond Research and Mercantile City, on 15 February 2015.[12][1] Though the COVID-19 pandemic slowed the construction progress, the pace was increased after restrictions were lifted. The overall structure of the complex was completed in May 2022,[13] and the overall construction was finished on 26 July 2023.[3] It was officially declared as the world's largest office building, surpassing The Pentagon, by the Guinness World Records on 22 August 2023.[10] It was supposed to be inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in November 2023, but due to some internal works pending, it was delayed, and was inaugurated and opened on 17 December 2023.[14]

Structure

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Panchtattva courts between the towers of the SDB complex

The building is located in the core of the Diamond Research and Mercantile City, an upcoming business district. It is spread across 14.38 hectares (35.54 acres) with availability of 61,000 square metres (660,000 square feet) built-up area. The bourse comprises nine interconnected towers, each with 15 floors, accommodating 4,200 offices ranging from 28 square metres (300 square feet) to 700 square metres (7,500 square feet), out of which 2,700 offices are with 28 square metres (300 sq ft) area each in five towers, 900 offices with 46 square metres (500 sq ft) area in one tower, 400 offices with 93 square metres (1,000 sq ft) area in another tower, and two towers offering 350 larger offices exceeding 93 square metres (1,000 sq ft) area. The nine towers are connected with each other by a central corridor, with access to services and facilities similar to an airport terminal. There are nine Panchtattva courts in between the nine buildings, created as recreational and green spaces. There are 131 elevators, with a speed of three meters per second. It has a two-level underground parking space, capable of accommodating 4,500 cars and 10,000 two-wheelers. All of the offices are centrally air-conditioned through a chilled water-cooling system. The building provides amenities such as conference halls, multi-purpose halls, restaurants, banks, and retail shops along with security plans. In addition, there is a dedicated custom clearance house for import and export of diamonds, a National Diamond Research Institute (NDRI), an international convention centre, international education facilities, and five-star hotels.[15][14] The complex is a pre-certified green building by the Indian Green Building Council (IGBC) because of its eco-friendly and sustainabity measures adopted to function itself,[16] and is dubbed as the world's largest corporate building.[9][17]

Reception

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The bourse has received a lukewarm reception from diamond traders, as it is located on the outskirts of the city of Surat and has poor connectivity, when compared with the existing Bharat Diamond Bourse, located in the better-connected city of Mumbai.[18] The SDB announced incentives for shifting diamond business to Surat.[19][20] In order to boost connectivity, there needs to be worldwide connectivity with Surat, like the global diamond centres of Antwerp, Chicago and London, in order to establish its dominance out of Mumbai, and let firms enter without hesitation. The Surat Airport has been expanded to an international status, which was also inaugurated on the same day of the SDB's inauguration, and will help to fulfill this target.[21] As of July 2024, out of 4,200 offices, over 200 offices have been opened, out of which over 30 offices are operated by Mumbai-based diamond firms.[22]

Diamond jewellery mall

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The complex also has the "diamond jewellery mall", which is a first in the world. It covers an area of 4,600 square metres (50,000 sq ft) within the SDB, and will host top international brands specialised in diamond jewellery retailing. As part of the mall, the SDB will have 27 diamond jewellery showrooms to provide spaces for the brands. The showrooms will be auctioned by the SDB Administrative Committee.[23]

Customs clearance center

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The complex houses India's largest customs clearance center, covering an area of 5,600 square metres (60,000 sq ft) The customs office, strategically located in the basement of the SDB, will oversee the export of valuable diamonds to various countries. It will be staffed by 11 officers, including a customs superintendent and inspectors, all sponsored by the SDB diamond bourse committee for the first three years. The customs office hosts many facilities, including a waiting area, two safe deposit vaults, a customs house-clearing (CHA) room, a postal department room, custom officers' cabins, officer cabins, a valuer room, and a conference room. The customs house will inspect and clear diamond parcels for export, which will then be dispatched to the secure vault at Surat Airport for direct export to international destinations. However, due to the lack of direct international air connectivity to key destinations like New York and Antwerp from Surat Airport, the diamond parcels will still be sent to Mumbai for export, once cleared by the SDB customs office. As of December 2023, according to the SDB officials, the final approval from the Delhi customs headquarters is pending. Once granted, the SDB's customs house will be equipped with an Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) system for efficient tracking of diamond imports and exports, thus further streamlining the process for the rising diamond industry of Surat.[24]

DREAM City

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The potential of Surat's diamond industry has inspired the conceptualisation of the Diamond Research and Mercantile City (DREAM City). With a core objective of improving the trading facilities of the diamond industry (forward and backward integration), this smart city project, as part of the Smart Cities Mission, covers an area of 683 hectares (1,690 acres), on NH-53, close to the Surat international exhibition and convention centre, and at a distance of 3 km (1.9 mi) from the airport. The SDB is located at the centre of the upcoming city, thus making its location advantageous by staying close to the coast and to global markets, like the Middle Eastern countries of the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Qatar, Oman, etc.[25][15]

Environmental protection and sustainability measures

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With a focus on sustainability, the SDB minimizes its environmental impact by adhering to the principles of Panchtattva, aligning with the five elements of nature. The building consumes 50% less energy by using natural lighting systems, achieving a remarkable 45 kWh/sq.m./yr compared to the industry green benchmarks of 110 kWh/sq.m./yr. as per Energy Conservation Building Code (ECBC), thus earning it the prestigious Indian Green Building Council (IGBC) Platinum rating. It features one of the world’s largest radiant cooling systems. A combination of thermal mass and porosity in relevant areas results in low external heat gains and lower cooling loads. Hybrid climate systems integrate passive strategies for natural ventilation with energy-efficient mechanical cooling. The central spine flares into vertical fins to funnel low-intensity winds using the Venturi effect, while staggered atria allow for the escape of hot air through the stack effect, thereby maintaining a pleasant microclimate, or interior temperature. The radiant cooling systems cool the interiors by an energy-efficient system, that uses chilled water on the floors and ceilings. The rooftop solar project executed for SDB by the Ahmedabad-based startup, URON Energy, is one of the most unique and is one of the highest solar energy-generating rooftop solar projects in the world, with some very rare and ground-breaking features, such as:

  • It is the largest floating foundation rooftop solar project in India, utilizing over 545 tons of ready-mix concrete (RMC).
  • Around 40 tons of hot-dipped galvanzied (HDG) mounting structures have been set up, setting a new standard and a record for similar capacity solar plants in India.
  • A waterless robotic cleaning solution on the solar panels has been set up to save water and maximize energy generation.

Other features such as sustainable waste disposal systems have been set up, and there is adequate green area in the SDB's premises in order to make the premises eco-friendly and to promote afforestation.[26][16]

Connectivity

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The SDB is connected to DREAM City by a number of transportation options, as the core of the city, including:

  • Metro: The SDB is located near the upcoming DREAM City metro station and the Khajod metro depot, which are on the under-construction Surat Metro Line 1. The metro line will connect the SDB to other parts of Surat, as well as to the Surat International Airport.
  • BRTS: The SDB is also connected to DREAM City by the BRTS (Bus Rapid Transit System). The BRTS system provides a high-speed bus service that connects the SDB to other parts of Surat.
  • Road: The SDB is also connected to DREAM City by road. The main road that connects the SDB to DREAM City is the NH-53, running parallel to just north of the complex.

In addition to these transportation options, there are also plans to build a skywalk that will connect the SDB to the Dream City Convention Centre. The skywalk will provide a pedestrian-friendly connection between the two facilities.[27]

Connectivity between the SDB and DREAM City:

  • The metro station is located about 1 km (0.62 mi) from the SDB.
  • The BRTS station is located about 500 m (1,600 ft) from the SDB.
  • The NH-53 is a six-lane highway that connects the SDB to other parts of Surat.
  • The skywalk is expected to be completed in 2024.

See also

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References

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Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
The Surat Diamond Bourse (SDB) is a diamond trading facility and the world's largest office building, located in the DREAM City development near Surat, Gujarat, India, encompassing approximately 6.7 million square feet of constructed area across multiple towers designed to accommodate up to 65,000 professionals in the diamond industry.[1][2] Inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on December 17, 2023, at a construction cost of roughly 3,500 crore rupees (about $420 million), the bourse was developed as a not-for-profit initiative to consolidate diamond trading activities previously dispersed in informal markets, leveraging Surat's role in processing over 80% of the world's rough diamonds.[3][4][5] Intended to rival established hubs like Antwerp and Mumbai's Bharat Diamond Bourse, the SDB features over 4,200 networked offices, advanced security vaults, jewelry showrooms, and integrated facilities for cutting, polishing, and trading, all under one roof to streamline operations and reduce costs for traders.[6][5] Despite selling all office spaces, occupancy remains critically low, with fewer than 250 offices operational as of mid-2025, resulting in vast empty halls often described as a "ghost building."[7][8] This underutilization stems from multiple factors, including inadequate supporting infrastructure such as poor connectivity and proximity to waste sites, intense rivalry with Mumbai's entrenched bourse, a global diamond market slowdown exacerbated by competition from lab-grown diamonds and impending U.S. tariffs on imports, and internal industry hesitancy to relocate from traditional setups.[9][10][7] Leadership challenges have compounded issues, with the resignation of the bourse's president in early 2024 amid disputes over payments to contractors, highlighting operational and financial strains despite the facility's ambitious scale.[11]

History

Planning and Announcement

The Surat Diamond Bourse (SDB) project emerged from efforts by the Gujarat government and local diamond industry leaders to centralize international diamond trading in Surat, India's premier diamond polishing hub, thereby reducing reliance on Mumbai's Bharat Diamond Bourse and enhancing efficiency in the value chain. Planning began around 2015 as part of the broader Diamond Research and Mercantile (DREAM) City initiative, spearheaded by the Gujarat government to develop a specialized economic zone for gems and jewelry on approximately 700 hectares near Surat.[12][1] The initiative aimed to create over 4,000 state-of-the-art trading offices, workshops, and ancillary facilities on 36 acres in the Khajod area, with an estimated cost of Rs 3,200 crore, projecting direct employment for 1.5 lakh people and positioning Surat as a global competitor to centers like Antwerp and Tel Aviv.[13][14] Key industry figures, including Govind Dholakia of Kiran Gems—who later became SDB chairman—played pivotal roles in advocating for the shift, emphasizing Surat's 90% share in India's diamond processing capacity as a rationale for integrating trading onsite.[10] The formal announcement and commencement of groundwork occurred on October 23, 2016, when Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani laid the foundation stone at the Swarnabhoomi site in Khajod, marking the transition from conceptual planning to execution.[13][15] Rupani highlighted the bourse's potential to elevate Gujarat's diamond ecosystem, stating it would foster innovation, attract foreign investment, and generate substantial revenue for the state, while integrating sustainable design elements from the outset.[16] The event underscored public-private collaboration, with the Gujarat government providing land and policy support, including incentives for businesses relocating from Mumbai, amid ambitions to boost India's global diamond trade share. Construction contracts were awarded to firms like L&T, with initial phases focusing on the massive office complex designed to exceed the Pentagon in floor area.[17][18] This announcement aligned with national priorities under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who later praised the project as emblematic of India's self-reliant growth in high-value sectors.[19]

Construction Timeline and Delays

The foundation stone for the Surat Diamond Bourse was laid on February 15, 2015, by then Gujarat Chief Minister Anandiben Patel as part of the broader Surat Dream City initiative.[20][21] Construction faced an initial delay of approximately 1.5 years due to issues with land allotment and related approvals, with actual groundwork commencing on October 23, 2016.[22][15] The project spanned four years of active construction, during which two years were impacted by COVID-19-related disruptions, including lockdowns that halted progress and supply chains.[23][24] The structure reached substantial completion in July 2023, marking it as the world's largest office building by floor area at that time.[23][25] Inauguration occurred on December 17, 2023, following further adjustments to align with operational readiness, though initial plans had targeted an earlier opening in April 2023.[26] These delays extended the overall timeline from foundation to completion to over eight years, attributable primarily to bureaucratic hurdles in early phases and pandemic-induced interruptions rather than inherent engineering challenges.[15][23]

Inauguration and Initial Operations

The Surat Diamond Bourse was inaugurated on December 17, 2023, by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Surat, Gujarat, marking the official opening of the facility designed as a centralized hub for diamond trading, cutting, polishing, and jewelry manufacturing.[3][27] The event highlighted the bourse's scale, with a total floor area exceeding 660,000 square meters across nine interconnected towers, surpassing the Pentagon as the world's largest office complex.[2] All 4,200 office units had been sold prior to the inauguration, primarily to diamond traders and manufacturers from Surat's existing Mahidharpura district.[28] Initial operations commenced shortly after the inauguration, with projections for full functionality within 2-3 months as tenants completed interior fit-outs.[29] However, uptake was limited, reflecting broader challenges in the diamond industry. By September 2024, only eight companies were actively operating from the premises, compared to an initial target of around 1,000 firms.[30] Occupancy progressed modestly thereafter; as of December 2024, approximately 150 offices were operational out of the 4,200 available, with office-bearers actively encouraging transitions from legacy trading areas and initiating buying and selling activities in nearly 290 units.[8][31] Trading activities began incrementally, focusing on rough diamond procurement and polished diamond sales, but the bourse's underutilization persisted into 2025 amid stagnant demand and relocation hesitancy among traders.[32] Despite these hurdles, the facility achieved Guinness World Records recognition for its size in August 2025, underscoring its structural completion even as operational scaling lagged.[33]

Location and Infrastructure

Site Characteristics

The Surat Diamond Bourse occupies a 14.38-hectare (35.54-acre) site, equivalent to 143,825.40 square meters, classified as government barren land in Block No. 177/P, Moje: Khajod, Taluka: Surat City, District: Surat, Gujarat, India, postal code 395007.[34] This location falls within the Diamond Research and Mercantile (DREAM) City master plan area, strategically positioned adjacent to Surat International Airport for enhanced accessibility to global diamond trade networks.[35] The site's coordinates center around 21°6'40"N latitude and 72°47'40"E longitude, placing it in a developing commercial zone south of central Surat.[34] Topographically, the site features a flat terrain with an average elevation of 13 meters above sea level, typical of Surat's alluvial coastal plain influenced by the nearby Tapi River and Arabian Sea.[34] Soil conditions are characterized by salinity, reflecting the region's brackish groundwater and proximity to marine environments, which necessitates specific foundation engineering to mitigate corrosion and settlement risks in construction.[34] The area lacks significant vegetation, forests, or ecologically sensitive features within a 10-kilometer radius, supporting its designation for high-density commercial development without immediate habitat disruption concerns.[34] Climatically, the site experiences a tropical savanna regime moderated by the Arabian Sea, with temperatures ranging from 12°C to 45°C and annual rainfall averaging 1,192 millimeters, predominantly during the monsoon season from June to September.[34] This humid subtropical pattern influences site design for heat mitigation and flood resilience, given Surat's vulnerability to cyclones and heavy precipitation. The region lies in Seismic Zone III, indicating moderate earthquake risk, which informs the structural reinforcements incorporated into the bourse's nine-tower configuration.[34] Overall, the site's barren, saline, and low-elevation attributes align with efficient large-scale build-out, though they impose demands for sustainable water management and soil stabilization in an urbanizing coastal context.[36]

Connectivity and Accessibility Challenges

The Surat Diamond Bourse, situated on the outskirts of Surat near Khajod village, faces significant accessibility hurdles due to its peripheral positioning, approximately 9-10 kilometers from Surat International Airport and 11.5 kilometers from the city center.[37][38] Access primarily depends on personal vehicles, app-based cabs, or limited free shuttle buses from Surat's diamond trading hubs like Mahidharpura and Varachha, which take 30-40 minutes, lacking dedicated public transit options that could facilitate high-volume trader and buyer movement.[9] Air connectivity remains a core impediment, with Surat International Airport operating only about 35 flights daily—far below Mumbai's 1,000-plus—while international routes are confined to a handful of destinations including Dubai, Sharjah, and Bangkok as of mid-2024.[9] The airport's customs clearance facilities are not fully operational pending regulatory approvals, forcing many international visitors to route through Mumbai's Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport before overland travel to Surat, a process that undermines the bourse's appeal as a self-contained global hub.[9] Efforts to incentivize airlines with subsidies have yielded limited results, as air traffic to Surat has declined in recent years.[37] Ground infrastructure challenges include insufficient road capacity, with stakeholders advocating for wider arterial roads to handle anticipated traffic surges, alongside daily commute limitations from sparse transport alternatives.[39] Planned mitigations, such as a metro line adjacent to the complex targeted for December 2027 completion and the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train by 2028, remain unrealized, exacerbating hesitation among diamond traders accustomed to Mumbai's integrated networks.[9] These gaps, intertwined with the absence of comparable urban amenities, have directly impeded occupancy and relocation, as noted by industry figures emphasizing the need for robust export facilities and seamless access before viability improves.[9][39]

Architectural Design

Overall Structure and Layout

The Surat Diamond Bourse features a layout comprising nine interconnected 15-storey office towers emanating from a central spine, forming the core of its 7.1 million square feet built-up area across a 35.3-acre site.[40][1] The towers rise from a common third-level podium, inspired by branching tree structures, which supports efficient vertical circulation and horizontal connectivity.[41] This modular design employs reinforced concrete construction with post-tensioned slabs, optimizing parking layouts and reducing material use by 25 percent compared to conventional methods.[42] The central spine serves as the primary circulation corridor, linking all towers and resembling an airport terminal for seamless access across the complex, with each tower accommodating approximately 4,200 offices ranging from 300 to 7,500 square feet.[43][44] Oriented north-south, the towers maximize natural diffused daylight in 75 percent of workspaces while shielding against intense western solar exposure, integrated with features like grand atria for light penetration and openness on multiple floors.[45] Ground-level elements include air-conditioned entrance foyers, lift lobbies, and spine corridors, while upper levels incorporate radiant cooling systems for energy-efficient climate control.[46] Supporting infrastructure encompasses extensive parking facilities aligned with modular grids, alongside integrated green spaces and food courts on every floor to foster a collaborative environment for up to 67,000 occupants.[47][41] The overall configuration prioritizes functional density for diamond trading activities, with 131 lifts ensuring vertical mobility across the structure.[43] This layout redefines high-density commercial architecture by balancing scale, accessibility, and operational efficiency.[45]

Engineering and Scale Achievements

The Surat Diamond Bourse holds the record for the world's largest office building by floor area, with 659,611 square meters (7.1 million square feet) of usable space across a 35-acre site, surpassing the Pentagon's 620,000 square meters.[1] [48] This scale accommodates up to 65,000 workers in the diamond industry, consolidating cutting, polishing, and trading activities previously dispersed across smaller facilities.[49] The complex comprises nine 15-story towers interconnected by 24 linear spine corridors, forming a centralized layout that optimizes horizontal circulation over 4.8 kilometers of internal walkways.[50] [51] Engineering efforts addressed the challenges of such vast scale through advanced structural analysis, including wind tunnel testing on the building's long-span blade walls using 183 pressure taps to ensure stability against environmental loads.[52] The design incorporates 131 high-speed elevators to manage vertical transport for the projected occupancy, distributed across the towers to minimize wait times and enhance efficiency.[53] Nine internal courtyards, each covering 1.5 acres, provide natural light and ventilation cores, reducing reliance on mechanical systems while supporting the structural integrity of the interconnected framework.[53] [40] Construction utilized Building Information Modeling (BIM) to coordinate the integration of modular office spaces ranging from 28 to 10,500 square meters, enabling precise prefabrication and assembly of components for the mega-structure.[54] [51] This approach facilitated the rapid erection of the towers and spines, achieving completion in under three years despite the project's unprecedented size.[40] The resulting edifice demonstrates scalable engineering principles applied to commercial real estate, prioritizing density and functionality for a specialized trade ecosystem.[55]

Sustainability and Environmental Measures

Design Strategies for Efficiency

The Surat Diamond Bourse incorporates passive and hybrid design strategies to achieve significant energy efficiency in its hot, humid climate, targeting a consumption of approximately 45 kWh per square meter per year, which represents about 50% less energy use than typical green buildings.[56][57] These strategies prioritize low-tech interventions, such as building orientation and form, integrated with selective mechanical systems to minimize operational demands across its 7.1 million square feet of built-up area.[40] Passive cooling and daylighting form the core of the efficiency approach, with the 15-storey office towers oriented north-south to enable self-shading and reduce solar heat gain.[56] This configuration ensures over 75% of internal spaces are daylit without glare, supporting precise diamond grading activities while cutting reliance on artificial lighting.[56] The central spine, aligned with prevailing winds, leverages the Venturi effect for enhanced natural airflow, ventilating 40% of spaces passively; staggered atria further promote stack ventilation to expel hot air.[56] Site-specific wind and solar analyses informed the overall orientation, optimizing microclimate control and minimizing direct sunlight exposure.[57] Hybrid systems complement these passive elements, combining natural ventilation with energy-efficient mechanical cooling via a chilled water system for central air-conditioning and radiant cooling in upper-floor corridors.[57] Energy performance is further optimized through adherence to window-to-wall ratios and the Indian Green Building Council's standards, earning the complex an IGBC Platinum rating.[57] Landscape courts, designed around the Panchtatva (five elements) principle, integrate greenery to moderate local temperatures and support indirect efficiency gains, though primary savings derive from the building's envelope and airflow dynamics.[57]

Criticisms of Environmental Claims

The promoters of the Surat Diamond Bourse initiated construction without securing prior environmental clearance required under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, prompting the Gujarat Pollution Control Board to file a criminal complaint in 2018 after an on-site inspection confirmed the violation.[58] This breach occurred despite the project's scale—encompassing over 6.5 million square feet of built-up area—necessitating an Environmental Impact Assessment to evaluate potential effects on air quality, water resources, and local ecology in the marshy DREAM City site near Surat.[59] The complaint's withdrawal on May 31, 2025, following state government instructions, came after promoters argued the project qualified under Schedule 8 of the 2006 EIA Notification, exempting it from prior clearance as a commercial development below certain thresholds.[60] However, this post-commencement regularization echoes practices invalidated by the Supreme Court in May 2025, which ruled ex-post facto environmental clearances illegal for allowing projects to proceed without upfront impact mitigation, thereby risking unaddressed environmental harms.[61] Such initial non-compliance raises skepticism toward the bourse's sustainability assertions, including its Indian Green Building Council Platinum pre-certification and projected 50% energy reduction via passive design elements like radiant cooling and natural ventilation.[62][35] Pre-certifications, based on intended features rather than operational data, may overlook real-world variables from unvetted construction phases, such as soil disruption in a flood-prone area or unreported emissions from the 2.5-year build process involving extensive piling and material transport.[63] No independent post-occupancy audits verifying claims like 15% capital expenditure savings from green strategies have been publicly detailed as of October 2025, leaving assertions reliant on promoter-submitted models amid the clearance controversy.[42] This gap, combined with regulatory intervention to resolve the violation, underscores potential discrepancies between promoted eco-efficiency and enforceable environmental accountability.

Integrated Facilities

Trading and Office Spaces

The Surat Diamond Bourse features approximately 4,500 to 4,700 office spaces dedicated to diamond merchants and traders, distributed across nine interconnected 15-story towers linked by a central corridor spanning 22 kilometers.[64][35][65] Office sizes range from 300 square feet for smaller units to 7,500 square feet for larger workshops suitable for diamond cutting, polishing, and trading operations.[35][65] These spaces are equipped with 13-foot floor heights, 8-foot-wide corridors, and access to 131 elevators to facilitate efficient movement for up to 67,000 professionals.[66][40] Trading activities are integrated into the office layout rather than segregated into distinct exchange floors, reflecting the industry's preference for deal-making in private offices and informal settings. Large-scale traders occupy designated premium offices, while smaller operators utilize courtyard areas for negotiations, with nine 1.5-acre courtyards providing open seating and water features to encourage casual interactions.[40] The design emphasizes walkable connectivity across floors to minimize time constraints during peak trading hours, supporting imports, exports, and rough/polished diamond transactions in a centralized environment.[42] As of December 2023, around 130 offices were operational, with full occupancy aimed at consolidating Surat's fragmented trading ecosystem.[2] Additional trader-focused amenities within the office zones include secure vaults, conference halls for deal discussions, and proximity to customs clearance facilities, enhancing operational efficiency without relying on external hubs like Mumbai's Bharat Diamond Bourse.[64] This setup positions the bourse as a self-contained trading precinct, though adoption has been gradual amid industry shifts from Antwerp and Mumbai.[2]

Diamond Jewellery Mall and Customs Clearance

The Diamond Jewellery Mall occupies 50,000 square feet within the Surat Diamond Bourse and includes 27 dedicated showrooms for diamond jewellery brands.[67] This facility provides a retail platform for both domestic and international brands, integrating jewellery sales with the bourse's trading ecosystem to support end-to-end diamond processing from rough import to finished product retail.[67][66] Adjacent to the trading floors, the mall enhances the bourse's role as a comprehensive hub by accommodating retail operations alongside manufacturing and export activities, with showrooms designed to showcase polished diamonds and finished jewellery for direct consumer access.[68] The Customs Clearance Center, covering 60,000 square feet, represents India's largest integrated customs facility for gems and jewellery, enabling on-site processing of imports and exports without external transit.[69] Central government approval in 2023 authorized rough diamond imports and polished diamond/jewellery exports directly through the bourse, reducing logistical delays previously requiring shipments to Mumbai or other ports.[70] Full operational clearance was granted in July 2024, allowing cleared consignments to proceed straight to Mumbai airport for international dispatch.[71] This center supports the bourse's goal of doubling polished diamond exports by streamlining customs for over 65,000 anticipated users, including cutters, polishers, and traders, while minimizing handling risks for high-value cargo.[69][72] Integration with the jewellery mall facilitates seamless movement of goods from clearance to retail display, though utilization remains limited amid broader industry challenges as of 2025.[7]

Linkages to DREAM City

The Surat Diamond Bourse serves as the anchor tenant and seed development within the Diamond Research and Mercantile (DREAM) City project, occupying approximately 14.38 hectares of land in the broader 685-hectare master-planned district south of Surat, abutting the 90-meter-wide outer ring road.[12][73] This positioning integrates SDB directly into DREAM City's infrastructure framework, which is designed to consolidate diamond trading, research, processing, and ancillary mercantile activities under a unified urban ecosystem envisioned by the Government of Gujarat since its initiation.[74][35] DREAM City's master plan, revised in September 2025 to emulate the Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City) model, leverages SDB's commercial built-up area—spanning over 6.5 million square feet—as a foundational hub to attract further investments in diamond-related facilities, including research centers, logistics zones, and residential components tailored to industry workers.[75][2] The bourse's connectivity to DREAM City's planned amenities, such as enhanced road networks and proximity to Surat's diamond processing clusters, facilitates seamless material flow and trader access, with the overall project estimated to generate over 1 million jobs by fostering a self-contained ecosystem for the sector.[76][12] Initiated in 2015 as part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's vision for Surat's diamond industry consolidation, SDB's development has driven preliminary infrastructure advancements in DREAM City, including land allocation for customs clearance and jewelry retail integrated with the bourse's operations, though full realization of linkages awaits broader project rollout amid ongoing reviews by Gujarat's Chief Minister.[77][78] These interconnections position SDB not merely as a standalone facility but as a catalyst for DREAM City's transformation into a specialized business district, potentially rivaling Mumbai's Bharat Diamond Bourse by centralizing Gujarat's 90% share of India's diamond exports.[79][42]

Economic Objectives and Impact

Strategic Goals in Global Diamond Trade

The Surat Diamond Bourse (SDB) was established with the primary objective of centralizing diamond trading operations in Surat, Gujarat, leveraging the city's established dominance in diamond processing, where approximately 90% of the world's rough diamonds are cut and polished.[80] This consolidation aims to integrate trading, cutting, polishing, and export activities under one roof, thereby streamlining the supply chain and reducing logistical inefficiencies associated with fragmented operations across hubs like Mumbai and international centers such as Antwerp.[81][2] By providing dedicated facilities for import, export, customs clearance, and financial services, the SDB seeks to minimize transit times and costs, enabling faster turnaround for global buyers and sellers.[82] A key strategic goal is to enhance India's value capture in the global diamond trade, which exceeds $80 billion annually in exports, by shifting trading activities from overseas and domestic competitors to Surat, thereby retaining more economic value domestically rather than exporting semi-processed goods.[81] Government-backed initiatives, including export promotion measures and infrastructure incentives announced during the SDB's inauguration on December 17, 2023, underscore efforts to diversify markets, promote branded and certified diamonds, and attract foreign investment in trading firms.[27] The bourse's design facilitates seamless international connectivity through advanced digital trading platforms and on-site banking, aiming to position Surat as a competitive alternative to established exchanges by fostering synergies between manufacturers, traders, and jewelers.[82][83] In the broader context of global trade dynamics, the SDB targets reducing India's reliance on foreign trading hubs by creating a self-sufficient ecosystem that includes research, merchandising, and backward linkages to mining and forward linkages to retail, as part of the integrated Diamond Research and Mercantile (DREAM) City development.[84] This approach is intended to boost employment for over 1 million workers in the sector and elevate India's share in high-value polished diamond exports, countering challenges like fluctuating rough diamond supplies and competition from synthetic alternatives.[81] Proponents, including industry associations, view these goals as a means to revitalize Surat's role from mere processing to a full-spectrum trading powerhouse, though realization depends on sustained policy support and market adaptation.[27]

Achievements in Industry Shift

The Surat Diamond Bourse has advanced the consolidation of India's diamond industry by enabling the relocation of trading functions from Mumbai to Surat, where over 90% of the world's rough diamonds are cut and polished, thereby minimizing logistics costs and enhancing supply chain efficiency. Inaugurated on December 17, 2023, the facility offered incentives including streamlined customs processes and integrated infrastructure to attract traders, with the goal of capturing a larger share of the nation's diamond exports, which totaled approximately $23 billion in fiscal year 2023.[81] A key achievement was the relocation of Kiran Gems, identified as the world's largest natural diamond manufacturer with an annual turnover of Rs 17,000 crore (about $2 billion), which shifted its global headquarters to the bourse in November 2023, constructing dedicated spaces and relocating staff to support on-site trading and operations.[85] [86] This pioneering move demonstrated the feasibility of transferring high-volume trading from Mumbai's Bharat Diamond Bourse, potentially reducing dependency on the older hub.[10] By July 2025, around 50 prominent traders had committed to relocating their operations to the SDB, reflecting growing momentum toward industry centralization in Surat amid government-backed efforts to bolster the region's economic role in global diamond trade.[87] The bourse's sale of over 4,700 office units further underscored initial commercial interest in this paradigm shift, positioning Surat as a more vertically integrated alternative to fragmented trading centers.[7]

Current Utilization and Market Challenges

As of December 2024, the Surat Diamond Bourse (SDB) maintains extremely low occupancy, with only 150 out of approximately 4,200 offices operational, representing less than 4% utilization.[8] By August 2025, this figure had marginally improved to fewer than 250 active offices despite over 4,700 units sold, amid reports of several firms reconsidering relocation plans.[88] The facility, designed for up to 150,000 workers across 6.7 million square feet, remains over 95% vacant, echoing broader idleness in Surat's diamond processing sector where rough diamond prices fell 15% in late 2024.[89] [90] This underutilization stems from a confluence of industry-specific hurdles and external pressures. Traders have shown reluctance to shift operations from established hubs like Mumbai's Bharat Diamond Bourse, citing insufficient incentives and logistical disruptions; for instance, major player Kiran Gems returned to Mumbai in early 2024 after initial involvement.[91] [39] Surat's diamond exports, which process over 80% of global rough diamonds, plummeted from $25.48 billion in fiscal year 2021-22 to $13.29 billion by mid-2024, exacerbated by weak demand from China and inventory overhang.[92] [7] Prospective U.S. tariffs under the Trump administration, potentially reaching 27% on Indian polished diamonds, pose an acute threat, with projections estimating $5 billion in annual losses and up to 1.25 lakh job cuts in Surat by 2026.[93] [94] Factory closures and order droughts have intensified since mid-2024, with U.S. imports from India already down amid policy uncertainty, further dampening trader confidence in expanding at SDB.[95] Local efforts to encourage shifts, such as angadia courier services starting January 2025, have yielded limited traction amid these headwinds.[96] Despite government-backed infrastructure, the bourse's trading volumes remain negligible compared to pre-opening projections, highlighting overreliance on unproven demand assumptions in a contracting market.[28]

Reception and Controversies

Positive Industry Views

The Gem and Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC), India's apex body for the gems and jewellery sector, has actively endorsed the Surat Diamond Bourse (SDB) as a strategic hub for industry expansion, inaugurating a dedicated regional office there on July 10, 2024, to strengthen local business growth, foster innovation, and deepen connections with global markets.[97] GJEPC leadership, including Chairman Kirit Bhansali, has convened industry meetings in Surat to highlight the bourse's role in future growth amid challenges like U.S. tariffs, positioning it as integral to sustaining the sector's competitiveness.[98][99] Diamond industry stakeholders, including SDB Chairman Govindbhai Dholakia, praise the facility for delivering world-class infrastructure that addresses longstanding fragmentation in trading, manufacturing, and logistics, thereby enabling Surat—responsible for over 80% of global rough diamond cutting and polishing—to emerge as the unified voice of the Indian diamond ecosystem.[100] Proponents argue that the bourse's integrated design, spanning 67 acres with 6.6 million square feet of office space across 20 towers, streamlines operations and cuts overhead costs compared to Mumbai's Bharat Diamond Bourse, potentially increasing exports by consolidating value chain activities under one roof.[81][101] Traders and exporters anticipate employment gains of up to 1.5 lakh direct jobs in diamond-related activities, building on Surat's existing base of 800,000 workers, while government-backed incentives like single-window customs clearance and ethical trading protocols are viewed as accelerators for global competitiveness against hubs like Antwerp and Tel Aviv.[5] These perspectives underscore the bourse's alignment with industry demands for efficiency, as evidenced by GJEPC's collaborative efforts with Surat municipal leaders to integrate it into broader infrastructure development.[102]

Criticisms from Traders and Competitors

Traders in Mumbai, the traditional hub for India's diamond trading, have expressed skepticism about relocating to the Surat Diamond Bourse (SDB), citing inadequate infrastructure and logistical risks as primary deterrents. Connectivity remains a significant barrier, with the SDB's location outside Surat's municipal limits complicating secure diamond transport and increasing vulnerability to theft or delays.[10] One Mumbai trader highlighted the proximity of a dumpyard to the site as exacerbating security concerns for high-value goods.[10] Despite incentives offered by SDB promoters in early 2022, such as subsidized office spaces, fewer than 30 Mumbai-based firms have operational offices there as of mid-2024, reflecting limited appeal amid established networks in Mumbai's Bandra Kurla Complex.[103][104] Occupancy rates underscore these trader reservations, with only about 150 to 250 of the 4,200 to 4,700 sold offices actively used by late 2024, leading to descriptions of the facility as a "ghost building."[8][105] Several allottees have reconsidered expansion plans due to sluggish trade volumes and the bourse's failure to centralize global rough diamond dealings as envisioned.[7] Competitors from Antwerp, while not issuing direct public rebukes, benefit indirectly from SDB's underutilization, as Indian traders maintain reliance on established European verification and trading protocols amid geopolitical tensions like U.S. tariffs on Russian diamonds routed through India.[7] Broader complaints from Surat's local polishing firms, integral to the bourse's ecosystem, amplify competitive frictions, with factory closures and job losses—over 50,000 by mid-2025—attributed to weak Chinese demand and export curbs, deterring full integration with trading activities.[95] Mumbai industry leaders have dismissed claims of a mass exodus to Surat, arguing that the bourse overlooks entrenched supply chain efficiencies and regulatory familiarities that favor legacy hubs.[106] These views persist despite government-backed promotions, highlighting a disconnect between the SDB's scale and practical trader adoption.[39]

Broader Economic and Policy Debates

The development of the Surat Diamond Bourse has sparked debates on state-level industrial policies in India, particularly regarding incentives to consolidate diamond trading and manufacturing. Proponents argue that Gujarat's aggressive subsidies, including waived stamp duties and electricity rebates for bourse tenants, foster value addition by integrating trading with Surat's polishing ecosystem, which handles over 80% of global rough diamond processing.[81] Critics, including Mumbai traders, contend these incentives distort competition and undermine Maharashtra's established trading hub status, prompting calls for Gujarat to adopt Maharashtra's gem and jewellery policy framework to balance manufacturing incentives with trading support.[107][108] On the national policy front, the bourse exemplifies India's push under schemes like the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) to shift from export of raw materials to finished goods, aiming to capture higher margins in the $80 billion global diamond trade. However, this strategy faces scrutiny amid evidence of underutilization, with empty offices reported as of August 2025 due to weak demand rather than policy failures alone.[88] Policymakers debate enhancing customs facilitation and SEZ linkages to DREAM City, but causal factors like over-reliance on Chinese demand—down sharply since 2023—highlight vulnerabilities in export-led growth without diversification into jewellery fabrication or alternative markets.[109] Internationally, the bourse intensifies policy tensions with established hubs like Antwerp, where Belgium secured zero percent U.S. import tariffs on EU-polished diamonds in September 2025, exempting them from prior 15% duties and pressuring non-EU processors like India.[110] This disparity, compounded by G7 sanctions on Russian rough diamonds effective from March 2024, has raised Surat's certification and logistics costs via mandatory Antwerp routing, fueling arguments for India to pursue bilateral trade deals or "friend-shoring" exemptions to mitigate a projected 27-50% U.S. tariff hit on gem exports.[111][112] While some attribute Surat's 2025 slowdown—marked by factory closures and 10 lakh jobs at risk—to these policies, fact-checks indicate pre-existing demand slumps from lab-grown alternatives and inventory overhangs played larger roles than tariffs alone.[113][95] Broader realism suggests that without policy reforms emphasizing traceability and sustainable sourcing, India's midstream dominance risks erosion to tariff-favored regions.

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