Home Projects Hindu Heritage Experience Centre inspired by nature and religious symbolism
ProjectsArchitecture

Hindu Heritage Experience Centre inspired by nature and religious symbolism

Share
Hindu Heritage Experience Centre inspired by nature and religious symbolism
Share
Hindu Heritage Experience Centre inspired by nature and religious symbolism
© Leighton Asia

Arup designed the Hindu Heritage Experience (HHE) Centre in Mangarh, Uttar Pradesh. Throughout the design process, Arup used advanced digital tools to develop the geometry of the museum, as well as to improve buildability, facilitate prefabrication, and optimize energy performance.

The project develops an immersive experience in which spiritual teachings are transformed into an inspirational experiential journey. The masterplan, landscape, and buildings take you on this journey by using symbolic forms to elicit emotion through the senses of scent, sight, sound, and touch.

HHE is a spiritual immersive experiential center based on the life and teachings of Jagadguruttam Shree Kripalu Ji Maharaj, a significant religious figure. It is being built in Bhakti Dham, Mangarh.

Hindu Heritage Experience Centre
© Leighton Asia

The overall project creates a new civic campus for the site’s philanthropic foundation, whose generous operations include free hospitals, educational facilities, and grain allocation centers for the surrounding community.

The Hindu Heritage Experience Centre consists of two buildings, the first in the form of a lotus flower and the second in the shape of two hands coming together in the namaste gesture. The Lotus will host a series of exhibitions, while the Namaste will house valuable relics and study space for Jagadguru teachings.

Hindu Heritage Experience Centre
© Leighton Asia

The geometry of the new museum is highly complex, inspired by nature and religious symbolism. Architects started by developing a digital twin through advanced modeling, rationalizing wherever possible. This entailed documenting and streamlining every radius, as well as establishing the principles for the lotus flower shell and namaste structure. To keep things simple, architects repeated patterns and added symmetry to the shells.

The thermal mass of the building shell acts as a barrier to sun exposure during the day and cools at night, reducing energy consumption. Deep overhangs, indigenous tree species, and water are used in the design to modify local microclimatic conditions, providing solar shading in critical areas as well as shelter, dust suppression, and cooling.

Hindu Heritage Experience Centre
© Leighton Asia

Project Info

Project: Hindu Heritage Experience Centre
Contractor: Leighton Asia
Client: JKP Foundation
Location: Bhakti Dham, Mangarh
Status: Under Construction

Share
Written by
Muaz Emre

Architectural Designer, and Computational Design Enthusiast

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Related Articles
Europe’s Largest Green Facade: Kö-Bogen II Office Building by ingenhoven architects
Architecture

Europe’s Largest Green Facade: Kö-Bogen II Office Building by ingenhoven architects

​In the heart of Düsseldorf, Germany, the Kö-Bogen II project stands as...

Snøhetta Unveils NRK Normannsløkka Headquarters Design Proposal for Oslo
Architecture

Snøhetta Unveils NRK Normannsløkka Headquarters Design Proposal for Oslo

In Oslo’s Normannsløkka district, Snøhetta and LINK Arkitektur have revealed Kringkastern, their...

The New Headquarters: Inside the Revitalized Morro Vermelho
Architecture

The New Headquarters: Inside the Revitalized Morro Vermelho

​In the heart of Brasília’s Setor Comercial Sul, the Morro Vermelho building,...

Heatherwick Studio Reimagines Olympia London in £1.3B Redevelopment for 2025
Architecture

Heatherwick Studio Reimagines Olympia London in £1.3B Redevelopment for 2025

Olympia London, a historic exhibition center in West London, is approaching the...

Subscribe to all newsletters

Join our community to receive the latest insights and updates!

© 2025 ParametricArchitecture. All Rights Reserved. By utilizing this website, you are consenting to our User Agreement, Privacy Policy, and Cookie Statement. In compliance with the privacy laws of Turkey and the United States, we recognize and respect your rights. Please be aware that we may receive commissions for products bought through our affiliate links. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of any material from this site is strictly forbidden without prior written permission from ParametricArchitecture.

ad blocker mark

AdBlocker Detected!

Help Us Keep Our Content Free

Your support helps us continue delivering high-quality resources at no cost to you.

We’ve detected that you are using an AdBlocker. We completely understand the need for a clean browsing experience, but ads help us keep this platform running and continue providing you with high-quality content at no cost.

If you enjoy our content, please consider disabling your AdBlocker or adding our site to your whitelist. Your support allows us to create more valuable articles, tutorials, and resources for you.

Thank you for being a part of our community!