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Vedic home design
said to provide health, prosperity
By: GARY WARTH - Staff Writer
Paul Worland suffered from chronic sinus infections
and fatigue. Cathleen Cook suffered from various health problems,
including lingering depression.
Both feel much better today and say they are enjoying life more, with
better health, greater peace of mind and even improved finances. But
it wasn't a doctor, therapist or financial consultant who helped
improve their life, they say. It was their houses.
"We built the house as a Vedic
style," Worland said about this style of building associated with
Hindu culture. The word Vedic comes from Veda, which is a sacred Hindu
text.
Specifically, vastu architecture follows the
belief that the direction a building faces and the use of its rooms
have a direct effect on the health and well-being of its inhabitants,
he explained.
"Proper vastu means proper direction, dimension and placement of
the rooms," Worland said. "The orientation of the house is
critical. It (the front of the house) faces due east or due
north."
Like astrology, vastu architecture is based in a belief that solar,
lunar and planetary influences affect life on earth. Proponents of the
philosophy believe the strongest influence comes from the sun, which
generates different qualities of energy as it travels east to west.
Ancient Vedic formulas describe how houses should be designed so
activities in the house correspond with the influences of the sun's
energy.
While not as widely known as its Asian cousin, feng shui, which also
sees a correlation between design and well-being, vestu architect is
gaining in popularity.
The 200-person Maharishi Vedic City in Iowa consists entirely of
Vedic-style buildings, while the dozen or so Vedic-style homes near
Cook and Worland in Barona Mesa, just south of San Diego Country
Estates, make up the largest cluster of the style in Southern
California, Cook said.
Cook and her husband, Joel, moved into their custom home three years
ago. Like Worland, they practice Transcendental Meditation, introduced
to the West in the 1960s by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who is helping
resurrect Vedic design worldwide. The maharishi plans to build 3,000
"peace palaces" in the Vedic style to teach meditation and
other programs around the globe. An 18,000-square-foot palace opened
in August in Dallas.
"It works because the orientation of the house, relative to the
sun's axis, has a very powerful influence," Worland said of the
Vedic design principles. "Also, the placement of the room and
each of the corners of the buildings, and what you do in those areas,
will affect the whole house."
While associated with Hinduism, Vedic design principles are not tied
to any one religion, Joel Cook said.
"The Vedic is a body of knowledge that has been adopted by
Hinduism as a source of knowledge," he said. "It's just the
basic ways of looking at the laws of nature, how to live and ways to
stay healthy."
Joel Cook, an optometrist with a practice in Rancho Penasquitos, sees
vastu architecture not as mysticism, but as a set of sound principles.

"The idea is there's a best way to do everything," he said.
He also points to studies done by Dr. Alarik Aranander, director of
Iowa's Brain Research Institute, whose studies suggest the mind is
more orderly when facing east.
Worland's home is based on a traditional Eastern design, while the
Cooks' home is an elegant, Craftsman-style home with hardwood floors
and natural-finish wood throughout.
"It could be modular," Joel Cook said about how Vedic
principles can apply to any style. "It could be a trailer. It
could be any old thing you want."
The Cooks' home is crowned with a kalash, an ornate Hindu vase, but
there is little else to indicate the house was built following Vedic
principles.
But even people unfamiliar with Vedic design might notice that
something feels different about the house, the Cooks said.
"We find people who come to visit us like to linger," Joel
Cook said. "When they come for dinner, we practically shoo them
out the door."
According to literature from the Holland-based Maharishi Vedic
Architecture (www.VedicArchitecture.org), an incorrectly placed
entrance can lead to "inauspicious, negative influences for
everyone." Anger, aggression, constant fear, poverty, chronic
disease and lack of vitality and success also can result from
incorrectly placed entrances, according to the group.
The dining room should be where digestion will be most healthy, the
study should be where intellect will be most lively and the living
room should be where social life will enjoy the greatest support,
according to Maharishi Vedic Architecture. A booklet created by the
group shows the dining room to the south, the living room to the west
and the study to the north.
The Cooks' front door faces true east in accordance with Vedic
principles, which also call for clear north-to-south and east-to-west
sight lines. There should be no activity at the center of the house,
or the brahmastan. Accordingly, the Cooks have placed a small table
there, holding an orchid-filled vase, bathed in sunlight from an
overhead skylight.
Southern entrances should be avoided, so the Cooks have surrounded
their south-facing patio with a fence that has no gate.
A desk used for paperwork near the kitchen and another in the study
for personal finances both face north, the direction for prosperity.
Certain elements also must correspond with specific compass
directions. The fire element, for instance, should be the southeast
corner of the house, which is where the Cooks built their kitchen.
The earth element in the southwest corner represents stability and
restfulness, so that is where the Cooks placed their master bedroom.
The northwest corner of the house represents the air element, so it
was a good choice for the guest bedroom, as guests move in and out of
the house.
The water element should be in the north, where the Cooks built their
exercise pool, and the space element should be in the northeast
corner, where the couple built their meditation room. Even their
toilet faces north.
The Cooks say the results of following the guidelines have been more
than worth it. They moved to Barona Mesa three years ago after living
uncomfortably in a conventional house in Mission Hills.
"I feel better," Joel Cook said. "More secure. More
aware of the seasons and where you are on the earth."
"I think my health has really improved," Cathleen Cook said.
"I had a lingering depression. There was no reason for me to be
unhappy, but I was unhappy."
Worland, an architect and engineer for 22 years, is so convinced of
the merits of Vastu principles that he will not build a conventional
house.
"Before, I used to design whatever, up until around 1985,"
Worland said. "But then I realized that this vastu design is kind
of like a building code for good fortune and prosperity. If I'm not
designing something that's properly vastu, I'm designing something
that might not be best for my client. The architect or designer
actually has the ability to design good fortune for people."
Contact staff writer Gary Warth at gwarth@nctimes.com
or (760) 740-5410.
Vedic is defined as related to Veda, ancient sacred Hindu texts.
Sthapatya Veda is the table of knowledge in these texts that refers to
building structures and homes, and Vastu refers to how a house is
properly located to follow those principles.
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