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Vastu

Representative image for Indian religious and cultural topics
Representative image for Indian religious and cultural topics Image: Wikimedia Commons. Nagarjun Kandukuru / CC BY 2.0

Overview

Vastu, often referred to as Vastu Shastra, is a traditional Indian system of design and spatial planning associated with the broader corpus of Hindu knowledge traditions. The term is generally understood to relate to the principles governing the layout, orientation, proportion, and arrangement of built spaces such as dwellings, temples, towns, and gardens. Practitioners and traditional texts present Vastu as a body of guidelines drawn from a combination of architectural conventions, cosmological symbolism, and ritual considerations. In contemporary usage, the term appears in several overlapping registers: as a subject of academic study within the history of Indian architecture, as a living tradition referenced by temple builders and sthapatis, as a popular advisory practice consulted by homeowners, and as a topic of public discussion in media and self-help literature.

This draft is intended as a starting body for editors to expand, verify, and refine. It avoids specific claims about dates, authorship, schools, regional variations, named practitioners, statistical adoption, or scientific status, since such details require careful sourcing. Editors are encouraged to consult primary texts, peer-reviewed scholarship, and reputable surveys of Indian architectural history before adding factual specifics. Sensitive areas such as scientific validity and commercial practice merit particular care.

Background

Vastu is conventionally situated within the wider category of Indian śāstra literature, alongside related disciplines that address ritual, iconography, and craft. It is generally described as encompassing both theoretical schemata, such as diagrams used to organise plots and structures, and practical prescriptions concerning siting, entrances, room placement, water bodies, and the treatment of cardinal and intercardinal directions. The tradition is commonly associated with a class of practitioners drawn from hereditary lineages of architects and craftspersons, although in modern times the field has broadened considerably to include consultants, interior designers, and authors writing for general audiences.

Editors should treat the historical record with care. While several Sanskrit treatises are routinely cited in connection with Vastu, the dating, authorship, and textual transmission of these works are matters of scholarly discussion. Regional traditions across the subcontinent display significant variation in vocabulary, emphasis, and application, and the relationship between temple architecture manuals and domestic-architecture advice is itself a subject of academic debate. This article should distinguish, where possible, between attested textual content, historical practice as reconstructed by scholars, and contemporary popular adaptations, which often differ in tone and substance from older sources.

Significance

The significance of Vastu can be discussed along several axes. Within the history of Indian architecture, it is frequently cited as one of the indigenous frameworks through which buildings, especially religious structures, were conceived and laid out. Within Hindu religious life, certain elements of Vastu are interwoven with ritual practices around foundation laying, consecration, and the orientation of shrines. Within contemporary urban culture, Vastu has acquired a separate life as advisory content offered to homeowners, businesses, and developers, often in conjunction with allied traditions such as astrology.

Each of these registers carries distinct connotations, audiences, and standards of evidence, and the article should not collapse them into a single narrative. Readers may approach Vastu as a cultural inheritance, as a design heuristic, as a devotional practice, or as a contested popular trend; an encyclopaedic treatment should aim to describe these orientations fairly without endorsing or dismissing any of them. Editors should also be mindful that public debate around Vastu sometimes intersects with questions of science, pseudoscience, regulation, and commerce, and these should be addressed in measured language with appropriate sourcing.

Common topics for editors to verify

The following topics are commonly raised in writing on Vastu and should be verified against reliable sources before any concrete claim is added. This list is indicative rather than exhaustive.

  • Etymology and semantic range of the term, including its relationship to cognate Sanskrit terms used in architectural contexts.
  • Names, dating, and attributed authorship of treatises typically grouped under Vastu literature, along with the status of available critical editions and translations.
  • Key conceptual schemes, such as diagrams used to organise plots, classifications of sites, and frameworks linking directions, deities, and elements; these should be presented as described in specific cited sources rather than as a unified doctrine.
  • Regional traditions and lineages of practice, including any documented links with temple-building communities, without overstating uniformity across regions.
  • Relationship of Vastu to allied fields such as iconography, ritual manuals, and town planning literature.
  • Modern revival and popularisation, including the emergence of consultancy practices, publishing, and media coverage; specific names, organisations, and figures must be sourced and not invented.
  • Scientific status, including how Vastu is treated within mainstream architecture, engineering, and scientific bodies; any claims of empirical efficacy should be reported with attribution rather than asserted.
  • Legal and regulatory dimensions, if any, such as the role of Vastu considerations in public projects, educational curricula, or municipal practice; these are sensitive and require strong sourcing.
  • Comparative perspectives, such as scholarly comparisons with other traditions of geomancy or sacred architecture, kept brief and well sourced.
  • Critiques and controversies, including responses from rationalist organisations, consumer-protection commentators, and academic critics, presented in a balanced and attributed manner.

For each topic, editors should record the source consulted, note the date of access for online materials, and flag where sources disagree. Where reliable secondary scholarship is unavailable, it is preferable to omit detail rather than rely on promotional or self-published content.

Suggested structure for the final article

The final article may be organised in a way that allows readers to navigate between historical, doctrinal, and contemporary discussions. A workable outline could include the following sections, to be adjusted as sourcing permits:

  1. Lead section summarising the term, its scope, and its place within Indian cultural and religious life.
  2. Etymology and terminology, with attention to variant usages.
  3. Textual sources, presented chronologically where feasible, with attribution to scholarly editions.
  4. Core concepts and schemes, described as found in identified texts and not as a single homogenised system.
  5. Application in temple architecture, drawing on the literature on Hindu temple design.
  6. Application in domestic and civic architecture, including historical and modern examples that are well documented.
  7. Regional variations across the subcontinent.
  8. Modern revival, popular practice, and media presence.
  9. Reception, including scholarly assessments and public debate, with critiques attributed to named sources.
  10. See also, references, and further reading.

Editors should ensure that each section is proportionate to the strength of the available sources, that contested points carry inline attribution, and that the lead does not state as fact anything that the body of the article does not adequately support.

Editorial notes

This draft is provided as scaffolding for human editors and is not suitable for publication in its present form. It deliberately avoids specific historical, biographical, statistical, and scientific claims because such details cannot be responsibly generated from the title and cohort alone. Editors taking this draft forward should:

  • Replace generic descriptions with sourced statements drawn from reputable academic publications, standard reference works on Indian architecture, and primary texts in reliable editions.
  • Maintain a neutral tone, especially when describing claims about efficacy, scientific basis, or commercial services, and use attributed reporting rather than the article's own voice for contested points.
  • Avoid promotional language and refrain from naming specific consultants, firms, or branded services unless they are independently notable and well sourced.
  • Be careful with religious sensitivities, recognising that Vastu intersects with devotional practice for many readers while also being a subject of legitimate scholarly and rationalist critique.
  • Cross-check transliteration, diacritics, and Indian English usage for consistency throughout the article.

Where information cannot be verified, it should be omitted rather than approximated. Tagging unresolved points with editorial queries is preferable to inserting speculative content.

References

References to be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include peer-reviewed monographs and journal articles on Indian architectural history, critical editions and translations of relevant Sanskrit treatises, reputable encyclopaedias of Hinduism and South Asian studies, established Indian newspapers and magazines for contemporary reception, and statements from recognised scholarly or professional bodies where these are directly relevant. Self-published websites, promotional consultancy material, and unattributed blog posts should not be used as primary references. Each citation should include author, title, publisher, year, and, for online sources, the URL and date of access.