Entrance & Doors
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Window to Door Ratio

Windows should outnumber doors in every dwelling — more light entry than passage

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Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: खिड़की-दरवाज़ा अनुपात — विंडो टू डोर रेशियो (Khiḍkī-Darvāzā Anupāt — Window-to-Door Ratio)

Modern Vastu recommends a minimum 2:1 window-to-door ratio. Building codes require every habitable room to have at least one window meeting minimum size requirements. Windowless rooms are restricted to storage and utility use. Ventilation and natural light are recognized as essential for health — aligning modern standards with traditional Vastu principles.

Source: Contemporary Vastu + National Building Code of India

Unique: Building codes independently mandate minimum windows — modern safety aligns with traditional Vastu.

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

all

At least 2:1 window-to-door ratio across the dwelling, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.

Acceptable

all

Every habitable room has at least one window meeting code requirements.

Prohibited

all

More doors than windows creates a dwelling that is all passage and no light — Prana enters and exits without being retained or circulated. Rooms with doors but no windows are Andha Kosha (blind chambers) where energy stagnates. A house with excessive doors and few windows resembles a corridor rather than a habitation. The contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions reinforce this prohibition across all directions.

Sub-Rules

  • Windows outnumber doors by at least 2:1 ratio Moderate
  • Every room has at least one window Moderate
  • Rooms with doors but no windows exist Moderate
  • More doors than windows in the dwelling Moderate

Windows should outnumber doors in every dwelling — more light entry than passage creates a home that breathes freely and retains Prana. Rooms without windows are blind chambers where energy stagnates. The ideal ratio is at least 2:1 windows to doors.

Common Violations

More doors than windows in the dwelling

Traditional consequence: The dwelling becomes a passage rather than a habitation — Prana flows through without being retained. Occupants feel restless and unsettled, as the energy pattern favors transit over residence.

Rooms with doors but no windows

Traditional consequence: Andha Kosha (blind chambers) where stale Prana accumulates — associated with respiratory issues, lethargy, and negative mental states.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Vedic analogy of eyes (windows) vs. mouths (doors) — more perception than consumption.

Hemadpanthi

Wada courtyard facades achieve naturally high window ratios — dense Khidki arrays.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil Irul Arai concept — windowless rooms are formally classified as inauspicious dark chambers.

Kakatiya

Kakatiya palace window arrays — upper floors dominated by light-giving openings.

Hoysala-Jain

Hoysala Jali Kitiki — perforated stone screens as abundant window openings.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala Nadumuttam courtyard — the largest single opening, supplementing room windows.

Haveli-Jain

Haveli Jharokha density — highest natural window-to-door ratio in Indian architecture.

Vishwakarma

Bengali climate mandate — window abundance essential for ventilation in humid conditions.

Kalinga

Kalinga Jali perforated screens — window abundance through decorative stone screens.

Sikh-Vedic

Gurdwara window abundance principle — divine light floods the congregation space.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: खिड़की-दरवाज़ा अनुपात — विंडो टू डोर रेशियो (Khiḍkī-Darvāzā Anupāt — Window-to-Door Ratio)
Deity: Brahma
Element: All Five Elements (Pancha Bhuta)
Source: Contemporary Vastu + National Building Code of India

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction

Modern Vastu

Add ventilators (Roshandaan) above doors in windowless rooms to introduce light and air from adjacent spaces

structural2,000–₹8,000medium

Install a skylight or light tube in windowless rooms to bring natural light from the roof

structural5,000–₹25,000high

Use glass or translucent panels in internal walls to borrow light from adjacent rooms with windows

structural3,000–₹15,000medium

Remedies from other traditions

Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan

Vedic Vastu

Adjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

ManasaraXXXIV · 110-118

The Gavaksha (windows) of a dwelling shall exceed the Dwara (doors) in number — for the house that has more eyes than mouths sees more than it consumes, and the Prana that enters through Prakash (light) nourishes more deeply than the Prana that enters through Marga (passage).

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 48-50

A well-built dwelling has abundant Vatayana (windows) — more openings for light than for passage. The builder who makes many doors but few windows builds a sieve that catches nothing, while abundant windows make a dwelling that breathes with the rhythm of day and night.

MayamatamXIII · 18-22

The Sthapati shall plan Gavaksha in greater number than Dwara for each Bhumi (floor). Rooms without Gavaksha are Andha Kosha — blind enclosures — where Prana grows stale and disease takes root. Even the smallest chamber requires one opening to the sky.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraXVI · 22-28

Vishvakarma ordains that a Griha (house) shall have its Vatayana exceed its Dwara. The eye of a house is its window; the mouth is its door. A being with many eyes and few mouths is wise; a being with many mouths and few eyes is wasteful. So too the dwelling.

Samarangana SutradharaXXXII · 45-50

In the planning of openings, the Gavaksha count shall be the greater — for through windows enters the Tejas (light-fire) of Surya, and through windows enters the Prana of Vayu, and these two sustain the dwelling more than passage through doors.

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