College of Engineering, Pune
College Of Engineering Pune (COEP) Technological University is a unitary public university of the Government of Maharashtra,[5] situated in Pune, Maharashtra, India. Established in 1854, it is the 3rd oldest engineering institute in India, after College of Engineering, Guindy (1794) and IIT Roorkee (1847).[6][7][8] The students and alumni are colloquially referred to as COEPians.[9] On 23 June 2022, Government of Maharashtra issued a notification regarding conversion of the college into an independent technological university.[10] On 24 March 2022, both the houses of the state government passed the CoEP Technological University bill, which has conferred a unitary state university status on the institute.[11]
Former name | 1854–1864: Poona Engineering Class and Mechanical School[1][2] 1865–1879: The Poona Civil Engineering College[1] |
---|---|
Motto | Strength Truth Endurance Ethics Reverence |
Type | state university |
Established | July 1854 |
Chairman | Mr. Prataprao Pawar |
Director | Dr. Mukul Sutaone (officiating director) |
Academic staff | 20[4] |
Administrative staff | 400 |
Students | 4500 |
Undergraduates | 2,800[4] |
Postgraduates | 1,000 |
Address | , , , India |
Campus | Urban, 36.81 acres |
Website | coep.org.in |
History
The institution was started on July 1854, as the "Poona Engineering and Mechanical School", to train public works department (PWD) officials and was housed in Bhawanipeth, Poona in three houses for teaching purpose and a separate house for principal to train subordinate officers in the Public Works Department.[6][8][12][13][14] In July 1857, Henry Coke was given the charge of the institute.[15] Admission was open to all, irrespective of nationality or caste.[15] Good proficiency in English and basic knowledge of Mathematics were a prerequisite for getting admitted to the institute.[15] The process of admission required that the aspiring candidate apply to the nearest government English school, to whom the entrance examination papers were handed over.[15] The headmaster would take the examination on a date deemed convenient to him and submit the answer sheets to Henry Coke, the in-charge of the mechanical school.[15] After examining the papers, Coke would notify the headmaster of the school with the names of candidates who were deemed fit for admission. Scholarships of ₹ 6 were offered per month after a period of six months of training in the mechanical school for fifteen students. The courses offered included Mathematics, Drawing, Surveying and levelling, building and construction and setting out works on the ground.[15] The course would run for a period of two years.[15]
Later on, in the year 1865, the school was renamed to "Poona Civil Engineering College". The foundation stone of the new college was laid by the Governor of Bombay, Sir Bartle Frere, who was to become the Vice-Chancellor of the University, on 5 August 1865.[16][3][1] In June of the following year, Theodore Cooke M.A., was appointed the Principal. He went on to hold the office for next 28 years.[16][17] It started a course in Licensed and civil engineering (LCE) and trained masons and overseers. Later it secured affiliation to the Bombay university. The course was revised in 1886 and the minimum criteria required for admission was raised from Matriculation to the then Previous Examination.
In 1879 two new classes, an Agricultural class and a Forest class, were added to the college, and the name of the college was changed from "The Poona Civil Engineering College " to "The College of Science".
In 1909, the LCE was converted into the BE degree and the first batch of students passed out in 1912. All non-engineering courses were stopped by 1911, transferring the Bachelor of Science degree to the "Science Institute of Bombay" and subsequently in the year 1911, the name was changed to the "Government College of Engineering, Poona".
The institution was initially affiliated to the University of Bombay (now Mumbai) for a degree of Licentiate in Civil Engineering known as LCE in 1858.[6][18] The certificate course was converted into a civil engineering degree course in 1908 and degree programs in mechanical engineering and electrical engineering were started in 1912 and 1932, respectively. After the University of Poona was established in 1948, the college became affiliated to the new university. In 1968, the three-year degree was extended to 4 years constituting 8 semesters.
In 2003, the institute was granted complete autonomy by the State Government of Maharashtra, thus giving it the freedom to set its own curriculum and manage its own finances.[1] The institute was renamed "Pune Institute of Engineering and Technology". This was soon changed to present "College of Engineering, Pune" in 2006. With permanent affiliation to the Savitribai Phule Pune University, the institute now is an autonomous engineering school. This has been the biggest change as far as pedagogy at COEP is concerned.
In a bid to boost research in engineering and postdoctoral research, the College of Engineering Pune (CoEP) was granted an additional campus on government land located in chikli Pcmc . This extended campus is having area of 40 acres. In academic year 2020-21 institute also commenced full time degree course in management under faculty of Management.
Campus
The campus of COEP is spread over 36 acres. The campus is divided into four parts North Campus, South Campus, Hostel campus and Playground, due to roadways in between.
The main building is the present day administrative building of the College. It houses the Director, the Dean Academic Affairs, the Dean Student Affairs, the Gymkhana, the Examination cell and other various important administrative heads of the college. The building is almost three floors tall with a base floor length of 18 meters and a width of 9 metres. The building was refurbished in 2012.[19]
Academics
Admissions
The admissions are conducted on the basis of the marks secured in Maharashtra CET and HSC board combined. These admissions are conducted by the Directorate of Technical Education (DTE) through the Centralized Admission Process (CAP). Several admissions to direct second year of BTech course are also conducted for those candidates who have completed Diploma in Engineering at different polytechnic institutes in the state of Maharashtra. These admissions are conducted through the Centralized Admission Process (CAP) by DTE itself.[20]
The M.tech admissions are on the basis of the Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering (GATE) conducted by the seven old IITs and the IISc.
The college also provides Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) programmes in various fields.[21] Department of Applied Sciences is a recognised PhD research centre in the subjects of Environmental Sciences and Chemistry.
Rankings
College rankings | |
---|---|
General – India | |
NIRF (Overall) (2020)[22] | 101-150 |
Engineering – India | |
NIRF (2020)[23] | 50 |
Government colleges: | |
Outlook India (2022)[24] | 12 |
COEP was ranked 12 among government engineering colleges in India by Outlook India in 2022.[24] The National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) ranked it 50th in the engineering ranking in 2020[23] and 101-150 overall.[22]
Student life
Regatta
Regetta is an annual regatta hosted by the College of Engineering, Pune. Since its inception in 1928, it has showcased around 165 boats, notably the Eighter, which is one of the oldest boats.[25] The 92nd edition of Regatta was held on 8 March 2020. Unlike a Regatta which means a collection of boat races, COEP Boat Club's Regatta is a show of various kinds of boats, kayaks, punts, shell boats and scull boats. The events in this show are Telematches, Kayak Ballet, Shell Games, Punt Formation, Mashaal Dance and the Arrow formation.[26]
MindSpark
MindSpark is the annual technical festival hosted by the college and established in 2007. The idea behind MindSpark originated from the need to unite various departmental level festivals that were scattered across the academic calendar. It features about 50 events across various disciplines of engineering and has been backed by the support of industrial sponsors who also associate with COEP for placement. This event is usually scheduled in an odd semester (around September) and is of 3 days (usually weekend).[27][28]
ZEST
ZEST is the annual sports festival of COEP Technological University carrying the legacy since its beginning in the year 2002. More than 70 colleges across the country participate in the same. ZEST nurtures the idea "For the students, by the students". ZEST is a 3-day sporting extravaganza in which 20+ sports are played on a large-covered COEP Playground. It is a battlefield where there are no limits to challenges. In addition to this, ZEST hosts flagship events like Cyclothon, Marathon, Self-Defence Workshops, Fitness Sessions, and Sportsdeck Sessions. ZEST is graced with eminent chief guests like Geeta Phogat, Sandeep Singh, Lalita Babar, Rahi Sarnobat, Sultan Dange, Milkha Singh, Shireen Limaye, Aslam Inamdar, Mohit Goyat, Yogesh Nikam.
Impressions
Impressions, is the annual cultural festival of CoEP, which is held every year in the 2nd week of December and lasts for 3 days. Impressions was formed as a platform "For the Artists, By the Artists", to provide opportunities for people from the fields of Dance, Music, Theater, Art, and Fashion to display their talent. The events span over six main modules, namely – Dance, Music, Arts and Crafts, Dramatics, Photography, and Writing.[29]
Team Octane Racing (Formula Student Team)
Team Octane Racing, powered by Bajaj Auto is the Formula Student team of COEP TU. Team Octane Racing represents COEP TU at various Formula Student events like Formula Bharat,SUPRA SAE INDIA, Formula Imperial and Formula Green. They design, manufacture and test an F1 styled prototype vehicle.
With their last combustion vehicle, the FALCON 5.0, Team Octane Racing was the first and only team in Asia to successfully complete a formula student event with a turbocharged KTM 390 powertrain.
With a prestigious end to their combustion vehicle (CV) journey, the team decided to shift to electric category (EV) in 2019. Since then, they have successfully made 2 Electric Vehicles.
Their latest EV, the Alectrona 2.0 participated in Formula Imperial 2022 (held at Buddh International Circuit) and Formula Bharat 2023 (held at Kari Motor Speedway) this season. The team bagged overall 1st prize at Formula Imperial 2022 and overall 4th prize at Formula Bharat 2023.
CSI COEP Student Chapter
The Computer Society of India (CSI) Student Chapter of College of Engineering Pune (COEP), established in October 2018 is the college's largest technical chapter. It organizes a number of technical activities including workshops, competitions, technical symposiums, guest lectures etc. for its student members. Under the guidance of Department of Computer Engineering and Information Technology COEP, the student chapter has over 300 members and is run by a Core Team and faculty from the department.[30]
Team Nemesis Racing (Baja SAE)
Baja SAE is a world-wide event which comprises designing, fabricating, assembling an all-terrain four wheeler vehicle and running it on a specially prepared torturous track in a grueling competition for four hours. COEP's team is called Team Nemesis Racing.
COEP won overall championship at BAJA 2017 competition held at Pithampur, near Indore at the National Automotive Testing and R&D Infrastructure Project.[31] The team also won the Best Acceleration, the Raftaar award, Computer-aided engineering award, Best Build Quality, Endurance winner awards.
BAJA 2015 witnessed COEP starting at the pole position in the race consecutively for the fourth time by being the fastest vehicle. COEP received a total of following 9 awards in BAJA competition 2015, Overall-1st, Durability −1st, Acceleration-1st, Hill Climb-1st, Raftaar-1st, Innovation-2nd, CAE −2nd, Build Quality- 2nd, Safest Vehicle −2nd.
BAJA 2016 was held at Pithampur, Indore on 21 February 2016. COEP started at the pole position in the race consecutively for the fifth time by being the fastest vehicle. Out of the 14 award categories, COEP won 11 awards in BAJA competition 2016 retaining the Overall Championship.[32]
COEP won overall championship at BAJA 2017 competition creating a hat trick of records. In the 10th edition of Mahindra BAJA, a total of 415 entries applied for the event from 185 colleges that participated at a virtual stage, out of which 150 teams were selected for m- BAJA, while 35 teams for eBAJA. In the final round or the endurance test, 118 teams participated in the competition which was held from 16 to 21 February 2017 at the NATRIP facility in Pithampur, Indore. Out of the 12 award categories, COEP won 7 awards in BAJA competition 2017 retaining the Overall Championship.[33]
COEP robotics team
COEP's Robotics Team is represented by the Robot Study Circle(RSC).[34] The Club has industrial collaboration with Siemens PLM as a title sponsor, Janatics Pneumatics, Schmalz India, Pepperl & Fuchs, and Robolab Technologies. Members of RSC are members of the first ever institute student chapter of THE ROBOTICS SOCIETY established in India at College of Engineering Pune. The robotics team has a number of awards and in 2017 team won the national ABU Robocon, going on to represent India in International Robocon held at Tokyo, Japan. RSC placed 6th.[35]
COEP satellite team
The satellite team also known as CSAT is CoEP's satellite initiative. They successfully worked on project Swayam a 1-U picosatellite which was launched by ISRO on 22 June 2016. After the successful launch of Swayam, CSAT is now working on its next mission: an experiment for alternate means of space travel with the help of solar sails.[36]
Participation in Guinness World Records
The college has made three entries so far in the Guinness World Record books. It holds the record for "Most people skipping on the same rope", which still stands as the world record[37] and "The longest painting by numbers"[38] and for "Most number of people solving the Rubik's cube".[39][40]
Notable alumni
- Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvarayya (1861–1962), recipient of Bharat Ratna and Knighthood, eminent engineer and statesman[1]
- Thomas Kailath, emeritus professor of engineering at Stanford University, winner of the IEEE Shannon Award and US National Medal of Science[41]
- C. Kumar N. Patel, Vice Chancellor for Research at the University of California, Los Angeles, inventor of the carbon-dioxide laser, winner of the United States National Medal of Science[1]
- Baburao Govindrao Shirke, Founder of B. G. Shirke & Company[42]
- Nitin Paranjpe, President of the Foods & Refreshment Division of Unilever[43]
- Laxman Narasimhan, an Indian-American business executive, who is CEO of Starbucks Corporation, and has previously served as CEO of Reckitt Benckiser, and Chief Commercial Officer at PepsiCo. [44]
- Rajiv Bajaj, Managing Director of Bajaj Auto: One of the largest two-wheeler manufacturer in India[45]
- Sumant Moolgaokar, Padma Bhushan, he was an Indian industrialist, known as architect of Tata Motors. He was the chief executive of Tata Engineering and Locomotive Company (TELCO). He also remained Vice-Chairman of Tata Steel and served as non-executive chairman of Maruti Suzuki.
- Ramesh Raskar, Associate Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Director of MIT Media Lab's Camera Culture group and developer of a high-speed femto-camera that captures pictures of light.[46]
- Jaydeep Kulkarni, Assistant Professor at University of Texas, Austin, Fellow of Silicon Laboratories Endowed Chair in Electrical Engineering, Fellow of AMD Chair in Computer Engineering [47] [48]
- Sandeep Johri, technology executive and serial entrepreneur, CEO of Tricentis[49]
- Vijay Kelkar, Padma Vibhushan, Advisor to the Finance Minister, Government of India in the rank of a Minister of State, Chairman, National Stock Exchange of India[1]
- Aravind Joshi, emeritus professor of Computer and Cognitive Science at the University of Pennsylvania.
- Lila Poonawalla, Padma Shri, an Indian industrialist, philanthropist, humanitarian. First Woman Engineer graduating from the Mechanical stream.
- Sanjay Govind Dhande, Padma Shri, an Indian engineer and educationist. He was director of the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur.
- Suhas V Patankar, pioneer in the field of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and Finite volume method. Notable as the co-developer of the SIMPLE algorithm in the field of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). He is currently a Professor Emeritus at the University of Minnesota.
- Milind Mulick, Indian watercolour painter, teacher and author
- Gaur Gopal Das, an Indian monk, motivational speaker and lifestyle coach.
- Vikas Kharage, IAS, Principal Secretary to the Chief Minister of Maharashtra. 34th rank in the country and 1st in Maharashtra of 1994 batch. Recipient of 'COEP Abhiman' Alumni Award.
See also
- Government College of Engineering, Nagpur
- Government College of Engineering, Aurangabad
- Government College of Engineering, Amravati
- Government College of Engineering, Chandrapur
- Government College of Engineering, Karad
- Shri Guru Gobind Singhji Institute of Engineering and Technology, Nanded
- Government College Of Engineering And Research, Avasari Khurd
References
- Times of India, Newsletter (16 December 2004). "150 years of engineering excellence". The Times of India. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
- Status, Concerns and Recommendations, Profile of Engineering Education in India. The Poona College (PDF). p. 24.
- India, PRwire (27 February 2008). "College of Engineering, Pune to Host Honeywell-Nobel Laureate Lecture Series". India PRwire. Archived from the original on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2011.
- Mandatory, Disclosure. "Annexure A" (PDF). 40th Meeting of Board of Governors of COEP. College of Engineering, Pune. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
- "Welcome to College of Engineering, Pune | College of Engineering, Pune". www.coep.org.in. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
- Henry Herbert Dodwell (1929). The Cambridge History of the British Empire. CUP Archive.
- College of Engineering, Pune, Official Website. "History". History of College. College of Engineering, Pune. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
- A.A. Ghatol, S. S. Kaptan, A. A. Ghatol, K. K. Dhote (1 January 2004). Industry Institute Interaction. Sarup & Sons. pp. 61–. ISBN 978-81-7625-486-1.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Shastri, Padmaja (4 April 2006). "'COEPians' discover alumni treasure move". The Times of India. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
- "पुण्यातील सीओईपीला कॉलेजला स्वतंत्र विद्यापीठाचा दर्जा". 25 March 2022.
- "From June, It Will be Coep Technological University | Pune News - Times of India". The Times of India. 25 March 2022.
- The Asiatic annual register; or, A view of the history of Hindustan,: and of the politics, commerce, and literature of Asia, ... Printed for J. Debrett, Piccadilly, by Andrew Wilson, the Asiatic Press, Wild Court. 1859. pp. 74–.
- Paulo B. Lourenço (February 2006). Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions: Possibilities of numerical and experimental techniques. Macmillan India. pp. 1811–1813. ISBN 978-1-4039-3157-3.
- Suresh Kant Sharma (2005). Encyclopaedia of Higher Education: Scientific and technical education. Mittal Publications. pp. 46–. ISBN 978-81-8324-017-8.
- The Asiatic annual register; or, A view of the history of Hindustan,: and of the politics, commerce, and literature of Asia, ... Printed for J. Debrett, Piccadilly, by Andrew Wilson, the Asiatic Press, Wild Court. 1859. pp. 77-.
- Bombay City, Univ (1866). The Bombay University Calendar for the year 1866–67. pp. 152–.
- Rheedea (2010). A Centennial Remembrance of Two Great Botanists (PDF). New Delhi: Department of Science and Technology, Government of India. pp. 135–136. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
- Department of Higher Education, Government of India. "Technical Education". Technical Education in India. Ministry of Human Resource Development. Archived from the original on 21 December 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
- "COEP heritage Main Building's restoration complete". Sakaal Times. 20 March 2012. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 9 August 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - "Welcome to College of Engineering, Pune | College of Engineering, Pune". coep.org.in.
- "National Institutional Ranking Framework 2020 (Overall)". National Institutional Ranking Framework. Ministry of Education. 11 June 2020.
- "National Institutional Ranking Framework 2020 (Engineering)". National Institutional Ranking Framework. Ministry of Education. 11 June 2020.
- "Outlook-ICARE Rankings 2022: India's Top 25 Government Engineering Colleges". Outlook India. 13 July 2022.
- "College of Engineering, Pune Regatta". Retrieved 24 February 2012.
- "Students prepare for COEP Regatta". 21 March 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
- "COEP's 'MindSpark 14' to begin from Sept 19". Sakal Times. Archived from the original on 2 May 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
- "Techfest 'MindSpark' to begin from Friday". The Times of India. 18 September 2014.
- "COEP Impressions 2018 All Set To Take Place On 13th −15th December". 10 December 2018. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
- "CSI COEP Student Chapter". csi.coep.org.in. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
- Syndication, DNA (19 February 2013). "COEP sweeps Baja SAE India Contest". DNASyndication. Retrieved 20 February 2013.
- "COEP Team Nemesis Racing continues to make records at Baja 2016 | College of Engineering, Pune". www.coep.org.in. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
- "COEP Team Nemesis Racing continues to make records at Baja 2017 | College of Engineering, Pune". www.coep.org.in. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
- "Robot Study Circle | College of Engineering, Pune". coep.org.in.
- "College of Engineering Pune wins Robocon, to represent India in Tokyo". The Times of India. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
- "Team CSAT".
- Guinness, Book of World Records. "Most people skipping on the same rope". Listing World Records. Guinness World Records. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
- Guinness, Book of World Records. "Longest Painting by Numbers". Listing World Records. Guinness World Records. Archived from the original on 25 January 2013. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
- Guinness Book of world record. "Most people solving Rubik's cube". Guinness world record. Guinness Book of world records.
- The Indian Express. "COEP sets another record, over 3,000 solve Rubik's Cube in 30 minutes". The Indian Express.
- Economic Times (4 October 2014). "Pune-educated Stanford professor Thomas Kailath, wins US National Medal of Science". Retrieved 5 October 2014.
- "SHRI BABURAO GOVINDRAO SHIRKE". The Journal of Engineering Education.
- "Nitin was appointed as President of the Foods & Refreshment Division per 1st January 2018". Unilever.
- "Starbucks Names Laxman Narasimhan as Next Chief Executive Officer".
- Bajaj, Finserv. "Company overview". List of chief people of the company. Bajaj Group. Archived from the original on 1 January 2012. Retrieved 11 January 2012.
- CMU (3 March 2017). "3D Printing of Microelectronic Devices". Science Advances. American Association for Advancement of Science. 3 (3): e1601986. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1601986. PMC 5336350. PMID 28275733.
- "Jaydeep Kulkarni | Texas ECE - Electrical & Computer Engineering at UT Austin".
- "Kulkarni Wins SRC Innovation Award | Texas ECE - Electrical & Computer Engineering at UT Austin".
- Bloomberg Profile on Tricentis
External links
- College of Engineering, Pune – Official web site