Ayodhya Ram Mandir: Everything about the conical shape of temple foundation

When the last layer of foundation is completed by sloping, then its upper surface will be left only of 84 thousand six hundred square feet.

Yogita
Published on: 15 Aug 2021 11:22 AM GMT
Ayodhya Ram Mandir: Everything about the conical shape of temple foundation
X

List of VVIPs Ayodhya for Ram Temple Consecration

New Delhi: In ancient times, the area of ​​the upper surface of the Ram temple foundation, being prepared in the style of large dams to be built on the forts of kings and rivers, will be 35 thousand four hundred square feet less than the bottom surface.

It is being reduced layer by layer on a fixed scale basis. It will look conical after the foundation filling is completed. When the last layer of foundation is completed by sloping, then its upper surface will be left only of 84 thousand six hundred square feet.


Ayodhya Ram Mandir:

On this basis, the carved stones will be laid and then the temple will take shape on top of it. These stones are to be planted up to a height of 12 to 15 feet.

The lower surface of the foundation of the temple is in an area of ​​one lakh 20 thousand. The length of this surface was four hundred feet and width was three hundred feet, which by reaching the upper surface would be 360 ​​feet long and 235 feet only. Earlier, the debris was dug up to 36 feet in the entire area of ​​the lower surface. Then the foundation filling work was started in the entire area. So far 32 layers have been molded. A total of 44-45 layers are to be molded. A layer is 12 inches thick, it is pressed two inches by running a bibrow roller.


In this way, the thickness of one layer is left only ten inches. In the casting of the foundation, the foundation is cast from this material by mixing the prescribed proportion of stone ballast and powder, coal ash, cement.

Experts say that in traditional construction styles, the lower surface of the foundation is always higher than the upper surface. With this the foundation is always strong and the building being built is timeless.

Stay tuned with the newstrack to get fastest updates. Click @englishnewstrack to follow us on Facebook and @newstrackmedia to follow on Twitter.


Yogita

Yogita

She covers current News topics, keeps the audience updated with Buzz around the world.

Next Story