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Vastu shastra



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 Vastu shastra
(vāstu śāstra, also vastu vedaand vastuvidya, "science of construction",  "architecture") is an ancient doctrine which consists of precepts born out of a  traditional and archaic view on how the laws of nature affect human  dwellings.[1] The designs are based on directional alignments. It is primarily  applied in Hindu architecture, especially for Hindu temples, although it covers
other domains, including vehicles, vessels, furnture, sculpture, etc. The  foundation of Vastu is traditionally ascribed to the mythical sage Mamuni Mayan  (Mahaa-muni Maya, a daanava/demon reformed by tapasyaa/austerities) in South and  Vishvakarman in North India.
 
While Vastu had long been essentially  restricted to temple architecture, there has been a revival of it in India, in  recent decades, notably under the influence of late V. Ganapati Sthapati, who  has been campaigning for a restoration of the tradition in modern Indian society  since the 1960s.
 
While the fields are related, Shilpa Shastra  explicitly deal with sculpture – forms, statues, icons, stone murals etc. The  doctrine of Vastu Shastra is concerned primarily with architecture – building  houses, forts, temples, apartments and other buildings.

 The Sanskrit word vastu means a dwelling or house with a corresponding plot  of land.[2] The vrddhi, vāstu, takes the meaning of "the site or foundation of a  house, site, ground, building or dwelling-place, habitation, homestead, house".  The underlying root is vas "to dwell, live, stay, abide".[3] The term shastra  may loosely be translated as "science, doctrine, teaching". Besides, some say
that Vastu was one of the greatest architect and town planning expert ever  produced by India who lived 2000 years ago. The king would send him for planning  and establishing a town. This concept of Vastu is not highlighted anywhere.

 There are many principles in Vaastu Shastra. To mention a few which involve  certain mathematical calculations, Maana is used for proportional relationships  in a building and Aayaadi specifies conditions for maximum well being and  benefits for the residents of a building. Below are some of the basic theories  in vaastu sastra.
 
Five elements 
According to vastu  sastra, the world comprises five basic elements known as the pancha maha bhoota.  Out of the eight planets, ours has life because of the presence and balance of  these five elements. The five elements are as follows.
 
EARTH
(Bhumi) - Earth, the third planet in order from the sun, is a big magnet with  North and South poles as centers of attractions. Its magnetic field and  gravitational force has considerable effects on everything on the Earth, living  and non-living.
 
WATER (Jala) - This is represented by rain, river,  sea and is in the form of liquid, solid (ice) and gas (steam, cloud). It forms
part of every plant and animal. Our blood is mostly water.
 
AIR
(Vayu) - As a life supporting element, air is a very powerful life source. Human  physical comfort values are directly and sensitively dependent on correct  humidity, air flow, temperature of air, air pressure, air composition and its  content.
 
FIRE (Agni) - Represents light and heat which account for  day, night, the seasons, energy, enthusiasm, passion and  vigour.
 
SPACE (Akasha) - The akasha provides shelter to all the  above elements. It is also considered the primary conductor of all energy
sources within the universal context – physical energies such as sound and  light, social energies such as psychological and emotional, and cognitive  energies such as intellect and intuition.
 
There is an invisible and  constant relation between all the five elements. Thus, the person can improve  their conditions by properly designing their buildings by understanding the  effectiveness of these five natural forces. Vaastu sastra combines all the five
elements of nature and balances them with the person and the material. It takes  advantage of the benefits bestowed by the five elements of nature to create a  congenial living and working environment thereby facilitating spiritual  well-being and paving the way for enhanced health, wealth, prosperity and  happiness.
 
In Indian architecture, the dwelling is itself a shrine. A home is called  manushyalaya, literally, "human temple". It is not merely a shelter for human  beings in which to rest and eat. The concept behind house design is the same as  for temple design, so sacred and spiritual are the two spaces. The "open  courtyard" system of house design was the national pattern in India before  Western models were introduced. The order introduced into the "built space"  accounts for the creation of spiritual ambiance required for the indweller to  enjoy spiritual well-being and material welfare and prosperity. At right is a  typical layout of a square building, with a grid of 9x9=81 squares, meant for  family persons (for scientists, artists and yogi a grid of 8x8=64 is  prescribed). The space occupied by the central 3x3=9 squares is called  Brahmasthanam, meaning the "nuclear energy field". It should be kept unbuilt and
open to the sky so as to have contact with the outer space (akasha). This  central courtyard is likened to the lungs of the human body. It is not for  living purposes. Religious and cultural events can be held here—such as yajna  (fire rituals), music and dance performances and marriage. The row of squares  surrounding the Brahmasthanam is the walkway. The corner spaces, occupying 2x2=4  squares, are rooms with specific purposes. The northeast quarter is called  Isanya, the southeast Agni, the southwest Niruthi and northwest Vayu. These are  said to possess the qualities of four respective devatas or gods—Isa, Agni,  Niruthi and Vayu. Accordingly—with due respect to ecological friendliness with  the subtle forces of the spirit—those spaces (quarters) are assigned as follows:  northeast for the home shrine, southeast for the kitchen, southwest for the  master bedroom and northwest for the storage of grains. The spaces lying between  the corner zones, measuring 4x5=20 squares (5 on each side), are those of the  north, east, south and west. They are meant for multi purposes Vastu Purusha Mandala
 
The concept of Vastu Purusha
The Vastu
Purusha Mandala is an indispensable part of vastu shastra and constitutes the  mathematical and diagrammatic basis for generating design. It is the  metaphysical plan of a building that incorporates the course of the heavenly  bodies and supernatural forces. Purusha refers to energy, power, soul or cosmic  man. Mandala is the generic name for any plan or chart which symbolically  represents the cosmos.
 
In Hindu cosmology the surface of the earth  is represented as a square, the most fundamental of all Hindu forms. The earth  is represented as four-cornered in reference to the horizon's relationship with  sunrise and sunset, the North and South direction. It is called Chaturbhuji  (four cornered) and represented in the form of the Prithvi Mandala. The  astrological charts or horoscopes also represent in a square plan the positions  of the sun, moon, planets and zodiac constellations with reference to a specific  person's place and time of birth.
 
The legend of the Vastu Purusha  is related thus. Once a formless being blocked the heaven from the earth and  Brahma with many other gods trapped him to the ground. This incident is depicted  graphically in the Vastu Purusha Mandala with portions allocated hierarchically  to each deity based on their contributions and positions. Brahma occupied the  central portion – the Brahmasthana- and other gods were distributed around in a  concentric pattern. There are 45 gods in all including 32 outer  deities.
 
North- Kubera- Ruled by lord of wealth  (Finance)
 South- Yama- Ruled by lord of death – Yama  (Damaging)
 East- Indra- Ruled by the solar deity- Aditya (Seeing the  world)
 West- Varuna- Ruled by lord of water  (Physical)
 Northeast {Eshanya} – Ruled by Shiva 
Southeast-  Agni- Ruled by the fire deity – Agni (Energy Generating)
 Northwest-  Vayu- ruled by the god of winds (Advertisement)
 Southwest-  Pitru/Nairutya, Niruthi- Ruled by ancestors (History)
 Center- Brahma-  Ruled by the creator of the universe (Desire)
 
The Vastu Purusha is  the presiding deity of any site. Usually he is depicted as lying on it with the  head in the northeast and legs in the southwest but he keeps changing position  throughout the year.
 
Vastu shastra prescribes desirable characteristics for sites and buildings  based on flow of energy called Vaastu Purusha. The morning sun is considered  especially beneficial and purifying however the sun does not play a specific  role in the Vaastu shastras. In fact it is not mentioned in the texts. None of  the heavenly bodies are mentioned in the Vaastu Shastras hence they are not  considered in the proper application of Vaastu principles.
 
Energy
is primarily considered as emanating from the center of the building. Many  people believe that it comes from the North East corner but in fact it comes  from the Brahmasthan or center of the building. It originates from subtle earth  energy called Vaastu Purusha and subtle cosmic energy (Unified Field) called  Vastu Purusha which meet in the center of the building and then spread outward
in all directions. these two energies unite and form the five elements which  then distribute in the for corner zones. (see Fabric of The Universe: The  Origins, Implications, and Applications of Vastu Science and Vaastu  Technology)
 
While many people think that "Vaastu energy" is  emanating from the North East, that is a misunderstanding. People also attempt
to equate the energy of the house with the planets. That is another  misconception. Vaastu energy emanates from the central part of the house  (Brahmasthan) and not from the east. (Pranava Veda and Vaastu Shastras). This  energy is a mixture of Vaastu energy, which is subtle energy from the earth, and  Vastu energy which is subtle energy from Consciousness itself. (See Fabric of  the Universe: The Origins, Implications, and Applications of Vastu Science and  Vaastu Technology by Dr. Jessie Mercay). Many assumptions are made about Vaastu  Science that are completely untrue. From these assumptions people have made up
ways to "correct vaastu" by selling yantras, crystals etc. for that purpose.  This is completely innapropriate as there is nowhere in the Vaastu Shastras that  indicates that any of these devices can correct faulty Vaastu. Once a person  becomes educated in Vaastu Shastra by an authentic Shilpi Guru (teacher of  Vaastu shastras) then it becomes clear that these ideas are  erroneous.
 
Mandala types and properties
 
Mahapitha
Mandala
The central area in all mandala is the Brahmasthana. Mandala  "circle-circumference" or "completion", is a concentric diagram having spiritual  and ritual significance in both Buddhism and Hinduism. The space occupied by it  varies in different mandala – in Pitha (9) and Upapitha (25) it occupies one  square module, in Mahaapitha (16), Ugrapitha (36) and Manduka (64), four square
modules and in Sthandila (49) and Paramasaayika (81), nine square modules. The  Pitha is an amplified Prithvimandala in which, according to some texts, the  central space is occupied by earth. The Sthandila mandala is used in a  concentric manner.
 
The most important mandala are the Paramasaayika  Mandala of 81 squares and especially the Manduka/ Chandita Mandala of 64
squares. The normal position of the Vastu Purusha (head in the northeast, legs  in the southwest) is as depicted in the Paramasaayika Mandala. However, in the  Manduka Mandala the Vastu Purusha is depicted with the head facing east and the  feet facing west.
 
An important aspect of the mandala is that when  divided into an odd number of squares, or ayugma, its center is constituted by
one module or pada and when divided into an even number of squares or yugma, its  center is constituted by a point formed by the intersection of the two  perpendicular central lines. In spatial terms, the former is sakala or manifest/  morphic and the latter is nishkala or unmanifest/  amorphous.
 
Mandala in siting
 
The mandala is put to use  in site planning and architecture through a process called the Pada Vinyasa.  This is a method whereby any site can be divided into grids/ modules or pada.
Depending on the position of the gods occupying the various modules, the zoning  of the site and disposition of functions in a building are arrived at. Mandala  have certain points known as marma which are vital energy spots on which nothing  should be built. They are determined by certain proportional relationships of  the squares and the diagonals.
 
A site of any shape can be divided  using the Pada Vinyasa. Sites are known by the number of divisions on each side.  the types of mandalas with the corresponding names of sites is given  below. 
Sakala (1 square) corresponds to Eka-pada (single divided  site)
 Pechaka (4 squares) corresponds to Dwi-pada (two divided  site)
 Pitha (9 squares) corresponds to Tri-pada (three divided  site)
 Mahaapitha (16 squares) corresponds to Chatush-pada (four divided  site)
 Upapitha (25 squares) corresponds to Pancha-pada (five divided  site)
 Ugrapitha (36 squares) corresponds to Shashtha-pada (six divided  site)
 Sthandila (49 squares) corresponds to sapta-pada (seven divided  site)
 Manduka/ Chandita (64 square) corresponds to Ashta-pada (eight  divided site)
 Paramasaayika (81 squares) corresponds to Nava-pada (nine  divided site)
 Aasana (100 squares) corresponds to Dasa-pada (ten  divided site)
 
Mandala in construction
 
The concept of  sakala and nishkala are applied in buildings appropriately. In temples, the  concepts of sakala and nishkala are related to the two aspects of the Hindu idea  of worship – Sagunopaasana, the supreme as personal God with attributes and  Nirgunopaasana, the supreme as absolute spirit unconditioned by attributes.  Correspondingly, the Sakala, complete in itself, is used for shrines of gods  with form (sakalamoorthy) and to perform yajna (fire rites). However the  Nishkala is used for installation of idols without form- nishkalamoorthy- and  for auspicious, pure performances. The amorphous center is considered beneficial
to the worshippers, being a source of great energy. This could also be used for  settlements. In commercial buildings, only odd numbers of modules are prescribed  as the nishkala or amorphous center would cause too high a concentration of
energy for human occupants. Even here, the Brahmasthana is left unbuilt with  rooms organised around.
 
House grid with sloping roof and open courtyard. In accordance with the  position occupied by the gods in the mandala, guidelines are given for zoning of  site and distribution of rooms in a building. Some of these are:
 North  – treasury
 Northeast – prayer room
 East – bathroom
 Southeast – kitchen
 South –  bedroom
 Southwest – armoury
 West – dining  room
 Northwest – cowshed.
 
Western  reception
 
Vastu has made inroads in western esotericism (where  architecture and "environmental metaphysics" have traditionally been dominated  by Chinese Feng Shui) only in the 2000s, reflecting the comparatively recent  revival of Vastu in Indian society itself.
 
Beginning in the late  1990s, a number of Western publications aiming at the esotericism market have  appeared, offering Vastu as an alternative to Chinese Feng Shui. This is an  erroneous assumption as the two fields are completely different. Vaastu Science
and Technology is concerned with building from the ground up. There is very  little that can be done to an existing structure to change the Vaastu effect.[5]  Recently, Vastu has been dismissively described by a British tabloid as "an  obscure Hindu version of feng shui"[6] but the tabloid does not cite any reason  for its opinion.


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