
Garbhita (Embedded) Dimension Derivation
The Garbhita (Embedded) Dimension Derivation ensures that internal room dimensio
Local term: गर्भित माप — आन्तरिक परिमाण व्युत्पत्ति (Garbhita Māpa — Āntarika Parimāṇa Vyutpatti)
Modern Vastu practice recognises Garbhita derivation as a proportional quality check on internal living spaces — the system ensures that wall-thickness choices do not inadvertently destroy the auspiciousness achieved in external dimensions. Contemporary architects apply the derivation using metric-to-Hasta conversion tables, and some Vastu software tools automate the paired external-internal calculation.
Source: Contemporary Vastu compilations; Architectural proportion theory; Modern Vastu Ganita guides
Unique: Modern Vastu software tools now automate Garbhita derivation — the architect enters external dimensions and wall thicknesses, the tool subtracts automatically, and flags any case where internal dimensions yield different Ayadi results from external. Some firms include Garbhita compliance in their printed Ayadi Certificate.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
Apply the Garbhita derivation by subtracting wall thickness from external dimensions, then verify internal dimensions independently satisfy the Ayadi Shadvarga using metric-to-Hasta conversion.
Acceptable
Simplified Aaya-Vyaya check on derived internal dimensions is acceptable as a minimum modern Garbhita verification.
Prohibited
Ignoring the Garbhita derivation means internal living dimensions are numerologically unchecked — modern practice considers this negligent when the calculation can be automated at zero additional cost.
Sub-Rules
- Garbhita derivation performed — internal dimensions independently verified as auspicious after subtracting wall thickness from external measurements▲ Major
- Both external and derived internal dimensions independently yield auspicious Ayadi remainders — no Garbha-Dosha present▲ Major
- Internal dimensions derived from external yield inauspicious Ayadi remainders — Garbha-Dosha (womb-defect) detected despite auspicious external shell▼ Major
- Garbhita derivation not performed — internal dimensional auspiciousness unknown, occupant living space numerologically unchecked▼ Minor

The Garbhita (Embedded) Dimension Derivation ensures that internal room dimensions — derived by subtracting wall thickness from external measurements — independently satisfy auspiciousness criteria. A building whose outer shell is numerologically auspicious but whose inner living dimensions harbour inauspicious remainders is classified as Garbha-Dosha (womb-defect). Jupiter (Guru) governs this principle as the planet of sacred geometric derivation and the relationship between outer form and inner essence.
Common Violations
Garbha-Dosha — internal dimensions derived from external yield inauspicious Ayadi remainders despite auspicious outer shell
Traditional consequence: The building's external proportions promise prosperity but the internal living space contradicts it — occupants experience a persistent gap between outward appearance of success and inner experience of disharmony. Classical texts compare this to a golden vessel filled with poison: attractive on the outside, harmful to those who dwell within.
Garbhita derivation not performed — internal dimensional auspiciousness unknown
Traditional consequence: Without verifying the embedded dimensions, the building's inner numerological character is left to chance. The structure may harbour hidden Garbha-Dosha that manifests only after occupation, by which time physical correction is costly or impossible.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The Varanasi Sthapati guilds maintained dual-column Ganita-padhati — the left column showing external Ayadi remainders and the right showing derived internal remainders for each wall thickness. Rajasthani Silawat masons adjusted wall thickness by 1/4 to 1/2 Angula to maintain Garbhita compliance, producing the subtly varying wall thicknesses visible in Jaisalmer and Jodhpur havelis.
Peshwa-era Wadas in Pune show wall-thickness variation of 2-5 cm between rooms — consistent with Garbhita optimization where each room's internal dimension was independently checked. The thick Hemadpanthi stone walls (often 45-60 cm) made the derivation critical: small changes in wall thickness produced large shifts in internal Ayadi remainders.
Tamil Sthapatis maintained triple-column palm-leaf Ganita-grantha: the first column for external Ayadi remainders, the second for wall thickness in Angulas, and the third for derived internal remainders. The Mayamatam prescribes wall thicknesses that are themselves Ayadi-compliant — a recursive mathematical elegance found only in the Tamil tradition.
Kakatiya guild record stones at Warangal contain paired external-internal Ayadi remainder tables in Telugu numerals — showing that the builders systematically verified Garbhita derivation. The Thousand-Pillar Temple shows wall-thickness variation of 3-8 cm between sections, consistent with Garbhita optimization for each internal space.
Jain Basadis at Mudabidri contain paired external-internal remainder inscriptions on pillar bases — the Sthapati recorded both sets of Ayadi values as a complete mathematical certificate. Hoysala temple walls show systematic thickness variations between 2-6 cm across different sections, consistent with room-by-room Garbhita optimization.
The Perumthachan lineage maintained Garbhita-specific Kanakku tables in their secret Ganita-grantha — showing which wall thicknesses preserve auspiciousness for each external dimension. Kerala's timber-frame construction allows wall-thickness adjustment with greater precision than stone construction, making Garbhita optimization particularly practical in Nalukettu building.
Solanki-era Havelis in Patan contain paired external-internal Ayadi values inscribed on courtyard foundations — proving the builders performed systematic Garbhita verification. The Jain Sthapati tradition treats incomplete mathematical verification (external only, without Garbhita) as a violation of Samyak-Jnana (right knowledge).
Bengali Sutradhar guilds maintained dual-column Ganita-paddhati — external remainders in the left column, derived internal remainders in the right — calibrated to the Bengali Hasta (23 Angulas). Bengali brick-wall construction used standardised brick dimensions (9x4.5x3 inches) that simplified Garbhita calculation: wall thicknesses were predictable multiples of brick width.
The Jagannath Temple at Puri is cited as the supreme exemplar of Garbhita compliance — both external perimeter and derived internal sanctum dimensions independently yield auspicious Ayadi remainders across all six calculations. Kalinga Sthapatis use the Kishku-Mana with paired external-internal remainder tables specific to Odia wall-construction standards.
Punjabi Raj-Mistri guilds maintained paired Ganit-pothi with external and internal Ayadi tables calibrated to the Punjabi Gaz. The Sikh building tradition emphasises Antar-Bahir Ek (inner and outer are one) — Garbhita compliance is seen as an architectural expression of this spiritual principle. Golden Temple renovations historically included verification that internal dimensions independently satisfy Ayadi checks.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Automated Garbhita calculation via Vastu software — modern standard for paired external-internal verification
Modern VastuPrinted Garbhita Compliance Certificate as part of the Vastu documentation package
Modern VastuPerform the full Garbhita derivation — subtract wall thickness from external dimensions, then apply Ayadi Shadvarga to the resulting internal measurements. If Garbha-Dosha is detected, adjust wall thickness by 1-2 Angulas (2-4 cm) to shift the internal remainder to a favourable value.
If physical wall adjustment is impossible in an existing structure, perform Garbha-Shanti Homa — a fire ritual specifically prescribed for pacifying the hidden inauspiciousness of embedded dimensions. The Homa invokes Guru (Jupiter) to harmonise the relationship between outer form and inner essence.
Consult a qualified Sthapati (traditional architect) for precise Garbhita analysis — the Sthapati will measure wall thickness at multiple points, derive internal dimensions, and recommend specific wall-thickness adjustments or ritual remediation.
Remedies from other traditions
Wall-thickness micro-adjustment at foundation level — North Indian Sthapati technique for Garbhita correction
Vedic VastuVastu Shanti Homa if post-construction Garbha-Dosha is detected
Wall-thickness variation at plinth level — Maharashtrian Sutradhar technique for Garbhita correction
HemadpanthiTulsi Vrindavan placement at the Garbhita-corrected internal dimension point
Classical Sources
“As a seed concealed within fruit must itself be sound for the tree to flourish, so the inner measure of the griha — born from the outer by subtracting the wall's girth — must independently satisfy the Ganita; if the outer shell alone is reckoned auspicious while the womb-dimension harbours an evil remainder, that dwelling is Garbha-Dushta, rotten within though fair without.”
“The Sthapati shall derive the Garbhita-mana by subtracting the thickness of each wall from the bahya-paridhi, then subject the resulting antara-mana to the same six-fold reckoning applied to the outer form — for a dwelling whose inner body conflicts with its outer garment shelters discord beneath a mask of harmony.”
“Let the builder not rest content with the outer measure alone — he shall compute the Garbhita dimension, which is the inner breath of the dwelling. As a lamp placed in a well-formed vessel still fails if the vessel's interior is cracked, so a griha whose embedded dimensions betray inauspicious remainders poisons the life within, however noble its facade.”
“Vishvakarma taught: the outer dimension is the body, the inner dimension is the Atman — both must resonate with the cosmic Ganita. He who checks only the bahya-mana and neglects the Garbhita-mana is like a physician who examines the skin but ignores the organs beneath; such a building carries hidden Dosha that no outer beauty can remedy.”

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