
Window Placement by Direction
Maximum windows on N/E walls, minimal on SW. The NE corner should have the most
Local term: Window orientation / fenestration (Window orientation / fenestration / natural light direction)
Modern Vastu strongly recommends N/E window maximization. Architectural science confirms: N/E windows provide the highest quality natural light (morning UV-A for Vitamin D synthesis, glare-free northern light for productivity). SW windows cause overheating and UV-B exposure. Indian real estate data shows 10-15% price premiums for N/E-facing apartments — the market validates Vastu.
Source: Contemporary Vastu + building science + Indian RE data
Unique: Modern practice has the strongest cross-disciplinary validation — Vastu, architectural daylighting science, dermatology (morning UV), and real estate economics ALL agree on N/E window superiority.
Window Placement by Direction
Architectural diagram for Window Placement by Direction
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
NE, N, E
Maximum windows on North and East walls — these are the light-receiving, prosperity-and-health directions. NE corner should have the largest windows or maximum glass area. Morning sunlight through East windows carries healing prana (UV-A, Vitamin D). North light is even, glare-free, and ideal for sustained work. The N/E sides of every room should feel open and luminous.
Acceptable
NW
Northwest windows provide evening light and cross-ventilation — acceptable and beneficial for the air element. Windows on all walls are fine as long as N/E windows are larger or more numerous than S/W windows.
Prohibited
SW
Excessive or oversized windows on the Southwest wall weaken the earth-element anchor zone. The SW should be the most solid, opaque, heavy side. Large SW-facing windows admit harsh afternoon sun and destabilize the dwelling's weight gradient. Small SW windows with heavy curtains are acceptable; floor-to-ceiling SW glass is a violation.
Sub-Rules
- More windows on N/E walls than S/W walls▲ Moderate
- NE corner has a large window or maximum glass▲ Moderate
- Large floor-to-ceiling windows on SW wall▼ Moderate
- NE corner has no window (solid wall)▼ Moderate

Maximum windows on N/E walls, minimal on SW. The NE corner should have the most glass area. The SW should be the most solid. This creates the natural light gradient that mirrors the cosmic energy gradient — light/divine (NE) to heavy/grounded (SW).
Common Violations
Large windows on SW wall with no curtains
Traditional consequence: Earth-element anchor weakened — harsh afternoon sun destabilizes the heavy corner. Occupants feel exposed, ungrounded, and energetically scattered.
No windows on NE corner
Traditional consequence: The divine light gateway is sealed — morning sun and prosperity energy cannot enter. The NE becomes a dark, stagnant zone despite being the most sacred corner.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition uses the beautiful Sanskrit term Gavaksha (cow's eye) — the window should be large, gentle, and forward-looking like a bovine eye.
Wada architecture demonstrates the most extreme N/E vs S/W window differential — courtyard openings vs fortress walls.
Tamil tradition adds deep sun-shade overhangs (Chajja) to S/W windows — controlling heat while maintaining ventilation.
Hoysala Jali (perforated stone screens) on NE facades are the most architecturally refined expression of graduated transparency.
Kerala laterite S/W walls combine Vastu solidity with tropical thermal mass — the heavy material serves both structural and climatic purposes.
Rajasthani/Gujarati Jharokha windows on N/E facades are India's most famous architectural window form — massive projecting bays on the light-receiving side.
Bengali tradition connects the morning sun through E windows to cultural values — Rabindranath's poetry about morning light reinforces the Vastu prescription.
Sikh Amritvela practice connects early morning prayer to N/E window light — the direction where dawn first appears.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
SW window remedies: (1) UV-protective film ₹2,000-8,000, (2) heavy thermal curtains ₹2,000-8,000, (3) exterior shade/awning ₹5,000-15,000. NE window remedies: keep clean, use only sheer curtains, never block.
Modern VastuAdd heavy curtains to large SW windows — block excess afternoon energy. Use blackout or thermal curtains.
Keep NE windows clean, unobstructed, and without heavy curtains — maximize light entry from the divine quarter
Use sheer/light curtains on N/E windows and heavy/dark curtains on S/W windows — directional curtain strategy
If NE has no window: add a large mirror on the NE wall to create virtual depth and reflect any available light
Apply UV-protective film to SW windows — reduces heat while maintaining visibility
Remedies from other traditions
Adjust door orientation to face Ishanya — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Ishan — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“Openings for light and air shall be greatest on the Uttara and Purva walls — where the morning sun and prosperity energy enter. The Nairutya wall shall have the fewest openings — solidity anchors the earth element.”
“Windows on the North invite Kubera's wealth-light. Windows on the East invite Surya's healing rays. The Southwest wall should be as solid as a mountain — few openings, thick construction, heavy curtains where windows exist.”
“The Gavaksha (window) arrangement follows the light gradient: maximum in Ishaan and Purva, moderate in Uttara and Vayavya, minimal in Dakshina and Nairutya. Light flows from the divine quarter to the earth quarter without obstruction.”
“Vatayana (windows) are the dwelling's eyes — they admit Prana, light, and Surya's rays. The North and East walls shall have the most and largest windows. The South and West walls admit harsh energy and must have smaller, shaded openings.”
“Windows balance the dwelling's breath. More openings on the North and East allow auspicious Prana to enter; fewer on the South and West limit harsh solar energy and Yama's gaze. The total count of windows should be even — symmetry in the dwelling's respiration.”

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