
The Peephole/Camera
The peephole or camera provides Drishti Raksha (sight-based protection) — the ab
Local term: पीपहोल — वीडियो डोरबेल (Peephole — Video Doorbell)
Modern Vastu universally recommends a peephole or video doorbell at the main entrance. Video doorbells have become the de facto modern Dwara Chakshu — they extend the screening function with recording, remote viewing, and two-way communication. This is one of the lowest-cost, highest-impact Vastu improvements available.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice; Smart home technology
Unique: Modern video doorbells extend the ancient Dwara Chakshu concept with recording, cloud storage, and smartphone notifications — the householder can screen the entrance from anywhere. Technology has made the ancient principle more powerful than ever.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
Video doorbell with recording and remote viewing. The ultimate modern Dwara Chakshu, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.
Acceptable
Standard peephole at eye level.
Prohibited
No screening mechanism — blind opening of the main door.
Sub-Rules
- Peephole at eye level or video doorbell/camera installed▲ Minor
- No way to see who is at the door before opening▼ Minor
- Side window or sidelight providing entrance visibility▲ Minor
- Intercom or video intercom system at the entrance▲ Minor

Principle & Context

The peephole or camera provides Drishti Raksha (sight-based protection) — the ability to see who or what energy stands at the threshold before opening the door. This small feature completes the entrance's screening function. Traditional Vastu prescribed a Dwara Chakshu (door-eye) at eye level; modern technology offers video doorbells, intercoms, and smart cameras as enhanced alternatives. A minor but practical element of entrance completeness.
Common Violations
No visibility before opening — no peephole, camera, or side window
Traditional consequence: The householder opens the door blind — admitting unknown energy without screening. While this is a minor Vastu defect, it represents a Drishti Raksha (sight-protection) gap. The entrance receives without awareness, like eating without seeing the food.
Peephole blocked, painted over, or broken
Traditional consequence: A Drishti mechanism that exists but doesn't function is like a closed eye — worse than having no eye, because the householder falsely believes they have sight protection. The illusion of security without actual visibility.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition frames the peephole as an application of Pratyaksha Pramana — direct perception as the basis for action. Opening a door without seeing who is outside is acting from Anumana (inference) or worse, Avidya (ignorance).
The Wada's Osari (vestibule) served as an architectural screening zone — visitors entered the Osari through the main gate but could not proceed to the inner courtyard until seen and admitted by the household.
Tamil tradition's Thinnai (raised verandah) served as an elegant screening solution — the visitor was received in a comfortable outdoor space while the householder decided on admission. No peephole needed.
Kakatiya guard chambers had multiple observation angles — the military principle of multi-angle surveillance translates to the domestic recommendation of adequate entrance visibility from inside.
Jain tradition elevates the peephole to a Viveka (discernment) tool — seeing before admitting parallels the spiritual practice of discerning truth from illusion before accepting ideas.
Kerala solved the screening problem architecturally — the Poomukham is a dedicated screening veranda. No peephole technology needed when the architecture provides a whole screening zone.
Gujarat's Jharokha — the iconic projecting lattice window — served as the entrance screening device in Havelis. This architectural element (also seen in Rajasthani Havelis) combined Vastu screening with artistic expression.
Bengali urban culture has normalized the peephole as a basic door component — a door without a 'Magic Eye' in Kolkata is considered incomplete. This cultural adoption effectively solved the Vastu requirement.
Jagannath Temple's elaborate gate-watch system (Dwara Pati — gate lord) elevates entrance screening to a sacred duty. The domestic peephole is a humble but functionally equivalent tool.
Sikh tradition emphasizes vigilance (Chaukīdārī) at the entrance — the door's eye is an extension of the householder's vigilant awareness. Awareness at the threshold mirrors spiritual alertness.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuInstall a standard door peephole (magic eye) at eye level — a 5-minute, inexpensive installation
Install a video doorbell (smart doorbell) for remote viewing and recording of entrance activity
Add a sidelight (narrow window) beside the main door with frosted or one-way glass for visibility without compromising privacy
Use a door chain or latch that allows partial opening for screening before full opening
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 householder shall have sight of who approaches before the Dwara opens. As the king's sentinel guards the gate with watchful eye, the Grihastha must know what energy stands at the threshold before admitting it. Blind opening invites both welcome guest and unwelcome intruder with equal ignorance.”
“The Dwar-Netra (door-eye) is a small opening in the Dwara panel through which the householder observes the visitor without revealing the interior. This Netra protects by providing Pratyaksha Jnana (direct knowledge) before the Dwara swings open.”
“The Griha shall not receive blindly — an observing aperture or lattice in the Dwara permits the householder's Drishti (gaze) to reach the visitor while the Kavach (armor) of the closed door remains intact.”
“Vishvakarma instructs: the Dwara Chakshu (door-eye) shall be placed at the height of the householder's eyes. Through it, Pratyaksha Darshana (direct seeing) precedes Dwara Udghatan (door opening). Knowledge before action — this is the Dwara Chakshu's Dharma.”

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