
Room Size Proportions (Ayadi)
Room proportions should follow auspicious Ayadi ratios — ideally between 1:1 (sq
Local term: N/A (Room Proportions, Length-Width Ratio, Ayadi Calculation, Spatial Harmony)
Modern Vastu simplifies Ayadi to practical ratio assessment — rooms should be between 1:1 and 1:2 in proportion. Full Ayadi calculation is rare in contemporary practice but the ratio principle is universally endorsed. Architectural psychology validates: proportionate rooms feel more comfortable and reduce stress.
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis
Unique: Architectural psychology validates — proportionate rooms reduce stress and increase comfort.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
Modern Vastu consensus places room size proportions (ayadi) in the zone of the dwelling — this synthesized pan-Indian guideline draws from all classical traditions and is validated by contemporary architectural analysis of natural light, ventilation, and spatial ergonomics.
Acceptable
In Modern Vastu practice, ratios between 1:1 and 1:2 are acceptable as long as the room feels proportionate and not excessively narrow. Slight deviations from the exact Ayadi ratios are tolerable in modern construction. The key principle: the room should not feel like a corridor (too narrow) or a vast, undefined space (too wide for its purpose).
Prohibited
Placing this function in violates the elemental balance — rooms with length-to-width ratios exceeding 1:2.
Sub-Rules
- Room proportions follow auspicious ratios (1:1 to 1:2)▲ Moderate
- Room proportions exceed 1:2.5 (corridor-like)▼ Moderate
- L-shaped or irregular room shapes▼ Moderate
- Square or near-square master bedroom▲ Moderate

Room proportions should follow auspicious Ayadi ratios — ideally between 1:1 (square) and 1:2 (maximum rectangle). Beyond 1:2.5, the room becomes corridor-like and energy cannot settle. L-shaped rooms fragment energy at the bend. The six-factor Ayadi Shadvarga calculation determines exact auspicious dimensions.
Common Violations
Room proportions exceeding 1:2.5 (corridor-like)
Traditional consequence: Energy rushes through the elongated room without settling — the space becomes a passage rather than a dwelling. Occupants experience restlessness, inability to relax, and a persistent feeling of transience in their own rooms.
L-shaped or T-shaped rooms
Traditional consequence: Split-energy space — the room's energy fragments at the bend. The occupant feels pulled in two directions simultaneously. L-shaped bedrooms create divided sleep patterns and relationship tension.
Extremely disproportionate rooms (1:3 or beyond)
Traditional consequence: The room becomes a tunnel — energy enters from one end and exits the other without circulating. No Sthiti (stability) is possible in such a space. Health and mental focus deteriorate.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition connects room proportions to planetary rhythms through mathematical formulae.
Wada proportional discipline combined aesthetics with structural engineering.
Tamil Sthapati's full Ayadi Shadvarga — the most mathematically rigorous proportional system in Indian architecture.
Kakatiya temple proportions — strict Ayadi for sacred architecture, simplified for domestic.
Hoysala star-shaped temple plans — the most geometrically complex proportional system in Indian architecture.
Kerala Thachu Shastra — the most rigorous domestic application of Ayadi calculations in India.
Haveli room-type-specific proportions — trading floor elongated, bedrooms square, courtyard square.
Bengali practical simplification — ratio assessment rather than full Ayadi calculation.
Konark Sun Temple — monumental proportional precision — following the Silpa Prakasha tradition of Odia temple and domestic architecture
Standard Vedic interpretation — simplified ratio assessment.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Consult a qualified Vastu consultant for professional directional assessment
Modern VastuApply elemental corrections using appropriate colors, materials, and symbolic objects
Modern VastuVisually divide an elongated room using a partial bookshelf, screen, or area rug to create two proportionate zones
For L-shaped rooms, use a screen or curtain at the bend to create two separate rectangular zones
Use color and lighting to visually shorten an elongated room — warm colors on the far wall and cooler colors on the long walls
For construction or renovation: design rooms with length-to-width ratios between 1:1 and 1:2 for optimal energy
Remedies from other traditions
Place a Vastu Yantra in the affected zone to harmonize directional energies
Vedic VastuPerform Vastu Shanti Homa to ritually correct the elemental imbalance
Install a Tulsi Vrindavan near the affected zone per Maharashtrian Wada tradition
HemadpanthiRecite Ganesh Atharvashirsha to invoke obstacle-removal before correction
Classical Sources
“The room's length and width shall be in auspicious proportion. The square is the most sacred — Brahma's form. The rectangle extends from 1 to 2 in the ratio of width to length. Beyond this, the room loses Sthiti (stability) and becomes a passage rather than a dwelling.”
“Ayadi Shadvarga governs the proportions of rooms. The six calculations — Aaya, Vyaya, Riksha, Yoni, Vaara, and Tithi — determine auspicious dimensions. The room whose proportions satisfy these six factors resonates with cosmic harmony and brings prosperity to its occupant.”
“The dwelling's rooms shall be proportionate as the limbs of a well-formed body. No room shall be excessively long and narrow, nor excessively wide and shallow. The proportions 1:1, 3:4, 2:3, and 1:2 yield the most harmonious energy.”
“Vishvakarma prescribes the proportions of rooms by Ayadi formulae. The width and length, when calculated through the six factors, yield auspicious or inauspicious remainders. A room with all six factors favorable is termed Shad-Ayadi-Yukta — the perfectly proportioned space.”
“The room's proportions determine its energy quality. A square room holds energy like a vessel; a rectangular room channels energy like a river. Beyond the ratio of 1:2, the room becomes a torrent — energy cannot settle, and the occupant finds no peace.”

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