
The Dormer Window
Dormer windows should face the North or East roof slope to bring morning light a
Local term: डॉर्मर खिड़की — छत की ढलान खिड़की (Ḍŏrmar Khiḍkī — Chhat kī Ḍhalān Khiḍkī)
Modern Vastu recommends dormer windows on North or East roof slopes for optimal light and ventilation without excessive heat gain. North dormers provide steady diffused light ideal for study or bedroom use. East dormers bring energizing morning sun. South and West dormers should be avoided or minimized due to heat gain. Building science confirms N/E dormers reduce cooling load in attic spaces.
Source: Contemporary Vastu + attic design standards
Unique: Thermal analysis confirms N/E dormers reduce attic cooling load vs. S/W placement.
The Dormer Window
Architectural diagram for The Dormer Window
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, NE, E
Dormer window on North or East roof slope for balanced light and ventilation, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.
Acceptable
NW, W
West dormer with reflective film or exterior shade.
Prohibited
S, SW
Placing the dormer window in S (Yama's zone) or SW (Nairuti's zone) violates Modern Vastu principles — the contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions warn against this placement as it disrupts the directional energy balance that the architect must maintain for the dwelling's wellbeing.
Sub-Rules
- Dormer faces North or East roof slope▲ Minor
- Dormer is operable for attic ventilation▲ Minor
- Dormer faces South or Southwest slope▼ Moderate
- Dormer has leaking or poor weatherproofing▼ Minor

Dormer windows should face the North or East roof slope to bring morning light and gentle ventilation to attic spaces. South and SW dormers pierce the protective roof shield, admitting harsh heat into the dwelling's highest chamber.
Common Violations
Dormer window on South or Southwest roof slope
Traditional consequence: Pierces the protective Dakshina/Nairritya shield of the roof — admits harsh overhead heat into the attic, creating an Agni pocket at the dwelling's Mastaka (head/crown).
Dormer window with persistent leaking or poor seal
Traditional consequence: Water ingress through a roof opening represents Jala Dosha (water defect) at the highest point — energy leakage from the dwelling's crown that weakens the entire structure's protective envelope.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Hill-station Jharokha tradition — N/E dormers in Himalayan and sub-Himalayan architecture.
Maharashtrian hill-station dormer placement — N/E slopes preferred in Western Ghats.
Nilgiris hill-station dormers — rare Tamil sloped-roof form following Vastu direction.
Kakatiya temple Shikhara openings — East-facing roof apertures as sacred precedent.
Hoysala Shikhara East-facing openings — sacred light admission from solar direction.
Kerala unbroken-roof tradition — dormers are non-traditional; roof continuity is sacred.
Jain Lokakash opening — roof window toward cosmic light direction.
Darjeeling dormer tradition — North-slope dormers in Bengali hill architecture.
Kalinga Deul East-opening — temple tower tradition guiding domestic dormer placement.
Sikh hill-architecture dormer — Parkash into upper chambers from N/E slope.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuInstall reflective film or external shade on a south-facing dormer to reduce solar heat gain
Add a heavy curtain or opaque blind to a south-facing dormer to block harsh energy
Plant a tree or install a trellis on the south side of the roof to naturally shade the dormer
Remedies from other traditions
Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“An opening upon the sloped roof shall face Uttara (North) or Purva (East), so that the highest room of the Mandira receives Kubera's or Surya's grace directly. The roof slope toward Dakshina and Nairritya must remain unbroken, for this is the shield against Yama's penetrating heat.”
“The uppermost chamber, being closest to the celestial vault, should receive its light from the North or East — directions of auspicious Devata. A roof opening toward Dakshina invites overhead Yama energy into the highest room, where it descends through the dwelling like rain through a broken roof.”
“Windows in the upper storey and roofline shall follow the same directional principles as those below — Uttara and Purva are the luminous faces, and light received from above through these faces is doubly auspicious, for it has descended from Akasha before entering the Griha.”
“The roof is the dwelling's Mastaka (head) — openings in it should face the auspicious directions as the eyes face forward, not toward the harsh southern glare. A dormer on the Uttara slope lets the attic breathe without admitting Yama's fire.”

Check Your Floor Plan