Shri Panchayatan Mandir
Traditional StyleCompleted
0 Photos Below ↓
HomeTemplesShri Panchayatan Mandir
Nira, Pune, Maharashtra·Est. 1995

Shri Panchayatan Mandir

Shri Panchayatan Mandir at Nira, Pune, Maharashtra.

Artisans
Traditional Sompura Craftsmen
Material
Traditional Stone

The Story

About This Sacred Structure

Shri Panchayatan Mandir at Nira, Pune, Maharashtra.

Shri Panchayatan Mandir is located at Nira in the Pune district of Maharashtra. Constructed by Bhagwati Construction (Hiren J. Sompura), this temple exemplifies the Panchayatan style of temple architecture, housing five principal deities in accordance with traditional Hindu sacred design.

NiraPuneMaharashtraPanchayatan

Shri Panchayatan Mandir

Project Overview

Style
Traditional
Location
Nira, Pune, Maharashtra
Year
1995
Artisans
Traditional Sompura Craftsmen
Material
Traditional Stone
Status
Completed
CRAFT

The Craft

How This Temple Was Built

Every Sompura temple follows a five-stage process rooted in the ancient SHILP Shastra texts — from the first survey of the land to the final sacred consecration.

Primary Material

Traditional Stone

Artisans Involved

Traditional Sompura Craftsmen

01

Site & Vastu Analysis

Every project begins with a thorough Vastu analysis — assessing cardinal alignment, soil quality, water table, and the subtle energetic properties of the land.

02

Sacred Drawing (Rekha)

Master Sthapatis produce hand-drawn plans based on Manasara and Mayamata proportional canons. Every column, shikhara, and doorway follows precise mathematical ratios.

03

Stone Selection

Stone is chosen based on grain, hardness, and acoustic properties. Sandstone, marble, and granite are assessed at the quarry before transport to the carving yard.

04

Hand Carving

Hereditary craftsmen carve each panel and deity by hand using traditional tools — chisels, hammers, and adzes passed down through generations of shilpis.

05

Assembly & Consecration

Stone panels are assembled using traditional dry-joint mortise and tenon connections — no cement. The structure is completed with Prana Pratishtha, the sacred consecration ritual.

BEGIN

Start Your Project

Begin Your Sacred Project

Whether you are commissioning a new temple, restoring a heritage structure, or seeking sacred architectural guidance — our masters are ready to listen, advise, and create.