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We’ve made simple swaps like using reusable bottles, eating fresh meals, choosing natural products, and reducing screen time – small steps that have improved our health and lifestyle.
These shifts weren’t overnight, but each step was intentional, rooted in a desire to live more consciously and healthily.









The building industry has contributed to many problems in the past, many of which are becoming more evident through the rise of modern health issues. The rise in these illnesses appears to coincide with the introduction of harmful plastics emitting pollutants in the atmosphere, synthetic glues and laminates, and overuse of electrical equipment.
When we talk about a Healthy home, it is far from today’s homes that are packed with state-of-the-art gadgets to make our daily lives simple or beautiful textured or glossy materials adorning the walls or furniture—in fact, these are the culprits since they emit electromagnetic fields and pollutants in the atmosphere. However a healthy house is designed like a living organism: – since it has life – PRANA , which is holistic and natural. It works with nature, not against it, prioritizing health, ecology, and simplicity over flashy design or tech savy homes. Such a home fosters wellbeing, spirituality, and harmony with the environment, expressing a deep connection with the natural world rather than just imitating its forms.
Creating Cosmic Connections through Sacred Geometry – Gurucharan Tirth
A Jain meditation space in Ahilyanagar is designed to harness divine energies using principles of sacred geometry and geobiology.
The design of sacred spaces is one of the most challenging undertakings in the world of Architecture. To transform a blank site into a portal that invokes divine auras and in turn evokes the feeling of devotion, requires deeply intuitive processes on the designer’s part.



