In many Indian homes, the foyer and puja space carry emotional value. They should feel calm, but they also need practical planning for movement, storage, lighting and privacy.
The Kanaka Nagar interior views show a marble-finish puja space, a decorative glass partition door and a top-view layout of the entrance and puja suite. Together, they explain how the zone works as a part of daily home movement.
The puja space needs a quiet frame
Soft lighting, a clean backdrop and controlled material selection help the puja area feel peaceful. The design should not depend on too many decorative items.
- Keep the backdrop simple.
- Use warm lighting without glare.
- Plan storage for daily puja items.
Partitions should give privacy without closing the space
The geometric glass partition creates a visual boundary while still keeping the area light. This is useful when the puja zone sits near the entrance or living area.
- Choose glass pattern carefully.
- Check door swing and access.
- Avoid blocking ventilation or light.
Foyer movement should remain clean
The top-view layout helps review how people enter, pause, access the puja area and move into the rest of the home.
- Keep footwear and storage planned.
- Avoid narrow entry passages.
- Coordinate lighting with the first view from the door.
A puja and foyer zone should feel graceful in real use, not only in a close-up render. When circulation, partition and lighting are planned together, the space becomes both respectful and practical.