Hemadpanthi — Maharashtra architectural tradition
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Maharashtra

Hemadpanthi

Stone-fortified architecture of Maharashtra's Wada mansions

Samarangana SutradharaHemadpanthi architectural tradition

About Hemadpanthi

Named after the 13th-century minister-architect Hemadpant, this Maharashtra-born tradition blends the Samarangana Sutradhara's spatial theory with the fortified Wada mansion form. Thick basalt walls, arched gateways (Darwaza), and the central open courtyard (Chowk) serving as a living Brahmasthan are its hallmarks. The Osari — a wide semi-open verandah facing the street — functions both as the wealth-receiving zone and a socially graded transition from public to private space. Hemadpanthi Vastu embraces stone and lime mortar as preferred materials and prescribes Tulsi Vrindavan (sacred basil pedestal) placement as a diagnostic marker of spatial purity. This tradition speaks directly to Maharashtrian families and anyone building in the Deccan plateau or Konkan coast.

At a Glance

Region
Maharashtra
Key Texts
Samarangana Sutradhara, Hemadpanthi architectural tradition
Patterns
1,333 patterns covered
Era
Classical to present

What Makes It Unique

1

Wada mansion courtyard (Chowk) as Brahmasthan

2

Stone-fortified construction with directional alignment

3

Osari (verandah) as wealth-receiving zone

Terminology in Hemadpanthi

Each tradition uses its own regional terminology. Here are some key terms from Hemadpanthi:

वास्तु पुरुष मंडल चौक वाडा (Vastu Purusha Mandal , Chowk central courtyard, Wada mansion)Deity: Brahma
स्वयंपाकघर अग्नि कोन चूल (Swayampak Ghar , Agni Kona , Chul)Deity: Agni
मालकाची खोली नैऋत्य कोन गढी (Maalak-cha Kholi owner's room, Nairutya Kona , Gadhi fortified chamber)Deity: Nairuti
देवघर ईशान्य कोन तुळशी वृंदावन (Devghar God's room, Ishaan Kona NE corner, Tulsi Vrindavan sacred basil platform)Deity: Ishana
महाल दरवाजा द्वार उंबरा ईशान्य — द्वार (Mahal Darwaza main gate, Dwar door, Umbara threshold, Ishaan Dwar NE door)Deity: Brahma

Who Is This For?

Families with Maharashtrian heritage

Anyone building in Maharashtra, Goa

Those interested in fortified residential architecture

9 Free Patterns

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RP-001🔓 Free
★★★

The Vastu Purusha Mandala

Hemadpanthi: वास्तु पुरुष मंडल चौक वाडा (Vastu Purusha Mandal , Chowk central courtyard, Wada mansion) — The Wada mansion is the Mandala made architectural. The central Chowk (courtyard) is Brahma's seat. Each wing of the Wada maps to a Mandala quadrant — NE wing for pooja, SE for kitchen, SW for the Maalak (owner), NW for guests and grain.

All·All
RP-003🔓 Free
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The Kitchen and the Fire Corner

Hemadpanthi: स्वयंपाकघर अग्नि कोन चूल (Swayampak Ghar , Agni Kona , Chul) — Swayampak Ghar in Agni Kona. In traditional Wada mansions, the kitchen always occupied the SE corner with a dedicated chimney exit on the SE wall. The Chul (hearth) was built with specific stone dimensions.

SE·Fire
RP-004🔓 Free
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The Master Bedroom and Earth

Hemadpanthi: मालकाची खोली नैऋत्य कोन गढी (Maalak-cha Kholi owner's room, Nairutya Kona , Gadhi fortified chamber) — The Maalak-cha Kholi (owner's room) always occupies the SW corner in Wada architecture. Hemadpanthi construction made the SW walls the thickest stone walls — the most fortified corner of the mansion. The householder's authority is architecturally expressed through the solidity of this corner.

SW·Earth
RP-005🔓 Free
★★★

The Pooja Room and the Divine Corner

Hemadpanthi: देवघर ईशान्य कोन तुळशी वृंदावन (Devghar God's room, Ishaan Kona NE corner, Tulsi Vrindavan sacred basil platform) — Devghar (prayer room) in Ishaan Kona is mandatory in traditional Wada design. The Tulsi Vrindavan (sacred Tulsi plant platform) is placed in the NE courtyard. Marathi Wada mansions always dedicated the NE wing to worship activities, with the Devghar as the first room accessible from the Chowk.

NE·Water
RP-006🔓 Free
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The Main Entrance and Prana

Hemadpanthi: महाल दरवाजा द्वार उंबरा ईशान्य — द्वार (Mahal Darwaza main gate, Dwar door, Umbara threshold, Ishaan Dwar NE door) — East-facing Wada entrances were considered most auspicious. The Mahal Darwaza (main gate) of the Wada was always the largest and most ornate architectural element. Pada positions were assessed by the Sthapati before construction. Some Marathi traditions are more tolerant of South-facing entrances than North Indian practice, if the Pada analysis is favorable.

N/E/NE·Varies
RP-012🔓 Free
★★★

The Bathroom and Waste

Hemadpanthi: संडास न्हाणीघर वायव्य कोन (Sandas toilet, Nyahani Ghar bathroom, Vayavya Kona NW corner) — In Wada mansions, the toilet was a separate structure in the NW corner of the compound — physically distant from the main dwelling. This separation was both Vastu-compliant and hygienically advanced. Modern Maharashtrian practice places the bathroom in the NW or West of the flat, maintaining maximum distance from kitchen and pooja.

W/NW·Mixed
ED-001🔓 Free
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The Main Door Direction

Hemadpanthi: मुख्य दरवाजा (Mukhya Darvājā) — Mukhya Dwar in Uttara or Purva direction. In traditional Wada mansions, the grand entrance (Darwaja) always faced North or East, with elaborate carved Sagwan (teak) door frames. The entrance vestibule (Osari) was designed as a transitional prana space between street and inner courtyard.

N/E/NE·Air
SE-001🔓 Free
★★★

Exposed Beam Over Bed

Hemadpanthi: Tuli (तुळी — beam), Chhad (छत — ceiling), Khaatul (खाटूळ — bedstead) — In Hemadpanthi stone construction, beams (Tuli) were massive structural members. Traditional Wada mansions were designed with sleeping areas under the highest ceiling sections, deliberately avoiding beam-over-bed configurations. Exposed beams in stone construction were considered doubly harmful due to the combined weight energy of stone and beam.

All·Earth
WF-005🔓 Free
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Kitchen Sink and Stove Relationship

Hemadpanthi: Chul (चूल — hearth), Paanyacha Bhanda (पाण्याचा भांडा — water vessel), Swayampak Ghar (स्वयंपाकघर — kitchen) — Chul (hearth) in Agni Kona, Paanyacha Bhanda (water vessels) in Ishaan Kona. In Wada kitchens (Swayampak Ghar), the stone-built Chul was always against the SE wall, while the water storage area was against the NE or North wall. Hemadpanthi stone construction physically separated these zones with load-bearing walls.

SE/NE·Water/Fire
FR-002🔓 Free
★★★

Headboard Direction — South or East

Hemadpanthi: undefined (Dakṣiṇekade Ḍoke, Uttarekade Ḍoke Ṭhevū Nakā) — Marathi households treat the North-head prohibition as the first rule taught to children. 'Uttarekade doke thevū naka' (don't place your head northward) is a common household saying. South-facing headboard is standard in Wada mansions. In modern Maharashtra, even hotel-conscious travelers check bed orientation — rotating hotel beds is not uncommon.

S/E·Magnetic
PL-001🔓 Free
★★★

The Square Plot Ideal

Hemadpanthi: Chauras Bhukhand (चौरस भूखंड — square plot), Chowk (चौक — courtyard) — Chauras Bhukhand is the ideal in Hemadpanthi and Maratha architectural practice. Traditional Wada mansions were built on square plots whenever available, with the internal courtyard (Chowk) also maintained as a perfect square to create a mandala-within-mandala.

All·Earth

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