
The Compound Wall Gate Size
The compound wall gate should be proportional to the wall height — gate height a
Local term: गेट साइज़ — कंपाउंड गेट अनुपात / माप (Geṭ Sāiz — Kampāũṇḍ Geṭ Anupāt / Māp)
Modern Vastu recommends compound gate height approximately equal to or slightly above compound wall height, with gate width determined by vehicle access needs. Decorative pillars or arches may extend above the wall to create a visual entry marker without violating proportion. The key is visual harmony — the gate should feel like a natural part of the boundary, not an afterthought or an imposition.
Source: Contemporary Vastu + architectural proportion standards
Unique: Modern decorative pillars — visual entry markers without proportional violation.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
Gate height ≈ wall height; width for vehicle access + 0.5m clearance, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.
Acceptable
all
Decorative pillars above wall height for visual marking.
Prohibited
all
A gate dramatically taller than the compound wall (more than 1.5x wall height) creates Vikrita Anupata (distorted proportion) — the gate overwhelms the wall, suggesting the boundary is subordinate to the entry. Conversely, a gate much shorter than the wall (less than 0.75x wall height) creates Laghu Dvara (diminished gate) — the entry feels oppressive and constricted, reducing the welcoming quality that a gate should project. The contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions reinforce this prohibition across all directions.
Sub-Rules
- Gate height proportional to compound wall height (1.0x to 1.15x)▲ Moderate
- Gate width adequate for vehicle access without being excessively wide▲ Minor
- Gate dramatically taller than compound wall (overpowering the boundary)▼ Moderate
- Gate much shorter than compound wall (feeling oppressive or constricted)▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

The compound wall gate should be proportional to the wall height — gate height approximately equal to wall height (1.0x to 1.15x). Disproportionate gates create either Ahamkara (arrogance) when too large or Dainya (meekness) when too small. The Anupata principle governs the visual and energetic relationship between gate and wall.
Common Violations
Compound gate dramatically taller than wall, overpowering the boundary
Traditional consequence: Vikrita Anupata (distorted proportion) — the gate dominates the wall, suggesting the boundary is subordinate to the entry. This creates Ahamkara Dvara (arrogant gate) that announces itself rather than serving as a harmonious transition. Visitors feel the gate's grandeur is compensating for — rather than reflecting — the dwelling's character.
Compound gate much shorter than wall, creating oppressive entry
Traditional consequence: Laghu Dvara (diminished gate) — the entry feels like ducking through a gap in the wall rather than passing through a welcoming threshold. This creates Anādara (unwelcoming) energy at the first point of contact, making visitors feel constricted before entering the dwelling.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Rajasthani Pol exception — grand gates for status expression.
Wada practical emphasis — gate as security element matching wall protection.
Tamil gate modesty — wall's enclosure taking visual precedence.
Telugu domestic restraint — fort gate grandeur not scaled to homes.
Jain gate restraint — size limited to functional need, preventing ostentation.
Kerala multi-level proportioning — gate to wall, gate to building.
Gujarati dual-scale — Pol community gates at lane scale, Haveli gates at wall scale.
Bengali plot-constrained proportion — narrow frontage naturally ensuring modesty.
Kalinga low-wall proportion — modest laterite walls requiring modest gates.
Sikh Nimratā — gate as expression of humility, not wealth — a distinctive feature of Sikh-Vedic architectural practice as documented in the Vedic Vastu principles adapted through Sikh architectural traditions.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuRaise or lower compound wall to bring it into proportion with the existing gate height
Add decorative gate pillars or arches to visually balance an undersized gate with a tall compound wall
Install a new gate panel of proportional height if the current gate is dramatically mismatched
Remedies from other traditions
Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The Prachira Dvara height shall be in Anupata (proportion) with the Prachira (compound wall) — neither towering above the wall like a temple Gopura nor crouching below it like a servant's passage. The gate and wall are partners in defining the Vastu's boundary; one should not dominate the other. The Dvara height equals the Prachira height multiplied by the Sama factor (1.0 to 1.15).”
“The compound gate width shall accommodate the passage of the householder's largest vehicle with Sukha (ease) — but excess width beyond this need creates Vikrita Vivara (distorted opening) that weakens the wall's visual and structural continuity. The gate is a puncture in the wall; it should be as wide as necessary and no wider.”
“The Sthapati shall proportion the Prachira Dvara to the Prachira as a face is proportioned to a body — the Dvara is the face of the boundary, and Anupata Saundarya (proportional beauty) requires that face and body be harmonious. A Dvara too large for its Prachira is a face too large for its body — grotesque and unsettling.”
“Vishvakarma taught that every Dvara has its Mana (measure) relative to the structure it serves — the Prachira Dvara's Mana is derived from the Prachira's height. The gate that respects its wall's Mana achieves Sama-Anupata (balanced proportion). The gate that ignores it creates either Ahamkara (arrogance) if too large or Dainya (meekness) if too small.”

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