Summary: This FAQ list contains additional questions on the topic of Vedic Architecture – a building and planning system to create peace and harmony in the home, the local environment and the community through the correct orientation, proportion and utilization of buildings. Vedic Architecture is also known as Vastu, Vastu Vidya, Vastu Shastra, Vaastu and Sthapatya Veda.
Q. Is Vastu or Vedic Architecture related to Feng Shui?
A. Yes, almost certainly Feng Shui was originally derived from Vastu. Most scholars agree that the knowledge of Vastu predates that of Feng Shui. This knowledge almost certainly spread from India to China before recorded history. Over the long period of time the two systems diverged as knowledge was passed from place to place and from generation to generation. Furthermore, Feng Shui fragmented into different ‘schools’ of thought. Many of the principles of Vastu and Feng Shui are now very different. It is best not to mix these systems.
Q. Do I have to believe in Vastu for it to work?
A. Vastu is not a belief system. It produces noticeable effects irrespective of one’s beliefs or culture. Some of the benefits, such as a settled sense of wellbeing, should be noticed immediately upon entering a building with good Vastu. Other benefits, such as those that are health or prosperity related, might take much longer to manifest.
Q. Is it possible to build a house with a perfect Vastu?
A. Even if a house was built using all the rules of Vastu, in isolation it would still not have a perfect Vastu! For a perfect Vastu, not only the house, but also the local community and the entire city need to be laid out according to Vastu formulae. Only then would it be nearing ‘perfection’ (actually a whole country can be laid out according to Sthapatya Veda – so we would then get even better Vastu!). City plans according to Vastu have an inherent symmetry and underlying beauty.
Q. Surely all houses built to the same Vastu formulae will all look the same?
A. Logically you would think that this would be the case. However in practice, houses built according to Vastu can look completely different according to the local materials used in their building and the occupant’s requirements. So Vastu built houses in Australia look very different from those built in the mid-west of the USA, which again look very different from the brick built Vastu homes in an English village. However, they do have clearly identifiable common elements such as a Brahmasthan at the centre, North or East facing main entrances, windows of a certain proportion, etc.
Q. Is Vastu ‘New Age’?
A. Most definitely not. It is very ‘old age’ indeed. Vastu has been around for many thousands of years. In the West we tend to value the ‘new’, in the East they tend to value the ‘old’. In the East, if something has withstood the test of time and comes from a respected tradition it is more valued. Vastu or Vedic Architecture comes from such a tradition.
Additional Information on Vedic Architecture
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- Additional Frequently Asked Questions on Vastu FAQs – 1, FAQs – 3
- Article giving an Introduction to Vastu
- Benefits of Good Vastu in the Home
- Top Tips for Better Homes
- Vastu: Housing Locations to Avoid
- Removing Negativity from Our Homes
- Vastu: Key Design Principles
- From the Maharishi Vastu website: More FAQs on Vedic Architecture
- From the Iskon website: Vastu as ‘Yoga for Homes’
- From the Maharishi Vastu website: Links between Vastu and Feng Shui
- Vastu Top Tips – Ideal Room Allocations