Entrance & Doors
ED-085★★★ Critical Full Details

Kitchen Door Never Opposite Bathroom Door

Kitchen door NEVER facing bathroom door — this is the most severe door-relations

Mixed
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: रोशनदान — वेंटिलेटर / ट्रैन्ज़म विंडो (Roshandān — Veṇṭilēṭar / Trānzam Viṇḍo)

Modern Vastu unanimously requires ventilation in every room — the Roshandaan principle is one of the most practically validated ancient building rules. Modern adaptations include exhaust fans, HVAC fresh-air intakes, and mechanical ventilation in sealed rooms. However, natural ventilation through traditional Roshandaan remains the gold standard. Sealed rooms without any ventilation are a major Vastu violation.

Source: Contemporary Vastu + building ventilation standards (ASHRAE/NBC)

Unique: Building science validates Roshandaan — natural stack ventilation through upper openings.

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

all

Natural Roshandaan above every door for passive stack ventilation, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.

Acceptable

all

Mechanical ventilation (exhaust fan, HVAC) if natural Roshandaan is not possible.

Prohibited

all

The only prohibition is the absence of ventilation — a room without any Roshandaan or ventilator creates Vayu Stambhana (air stagnation). Sealed rooms without upper ventilation trap stale Prana, which ancient texts compare to holding the breath — the room suffocates and its inhabitants suffer from the accumulated Dosha (defects) of stagnant air. The contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions reinforce this prohibition across all directions.

Sub-Rules

  • Every room has at least one ventilator or Roshandaan Moderate
  • Ventilators allow cross-ventilation between rooms Moderate
  • Rooms are completely sealed without any ventilator Moderate
  • Ventilators are blocked, painted shut, or non-functional Moderate

Every room must have a Roshandaan (ventilator) above the door or on the upper wall — this non-directional principle ensures continuous Prana flow even when doors and windows are closed. Sealed rooms create Vayu Stambhana that breeds disease and accumulated Dosha.

Common Violations

Room sealed without any ventilator or upper air opening

Traditional consequence: Vayu Stambhana (air stagnation) — creates a sealed chamber where stale Prana accumulates, health deteriorates, and Dosha (energetic defects) concentrate. Compared to holding one's breath indefinitely.

Existing ventilators blocked, painted shut, or sealed during renovation

Traditional consequence: Prana Marga Avarodha (life-path obstruction) — blocking an existing breathing channel is worse than never having one, as it deliberately seals a path that was providing life-force to the room.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Roshandaan as cultural universal — the ventilator principle embedded in everyday language.

Hemadpanthi

Wada Zhaḷ chain — connected ventilators moving air from Chowk to outer rooms.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil Agraharam ventilator chain — connected openings from front to back courtyard.

Kakatiya

Deccan ornate Jali ventilators — decorative plaster/stone air openings above doors.

Hoysala-Jain

Hoysala Jali Vayu Dvara — perforated stone ventilators in temple and domestic architecture.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala multi-layer ventilation — Vaathil Madam, eave gap, Jali, and Nadumuttam chimney.

Haveli-Jain

Gujarati ornate devotional Roshandaan — ventilators with Jain auspicious symbols.

Vishwakarma

Bengali cast-iron grille Roshandaan — colonial-era decorative ventilators.

Kalinga

Kalinga Jali ventilation — temple perforated-screen concept in domestic ventilators.

Sikh-Vedic

Roshandaan as Punjabi cultural icon — the word originates from this tradition.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: रोशनदान — वेंटिलेटर / ट्रैन्ज़म विंडो (Roshandān — Veṇṭilēṭar / Trānzam Viṇḍo)
Deity: All Dikpalas
Element: All Five Elements (Pancha Bhuta)
Source: Contemporary Vastu + building ventilation standards (ASHRAE/NBC)

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

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

Modern Vastu

Install a ventilator or transom window above each door to restore the Roshandaan principle

structural3,000–₹15,000high

Unblock or restore painted-shut ventilators to their original functional state

structural500–₹5,000high

Install exhaust fans in rooms without natural ventilation to create mechanical air movement

structural2,000–₹8,000medium

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

ManasaraIX · 195-202

Above every Dvara (door) in the Griha, the Sthapati shall provide a Vayu Gavaksha (air window) — a small opening that permits Prana to flow continuously between rooms and to the sky. This Shvasa Chhidra (breathing aperture) ensures that no chamber becomes Vayu-shunya (airless), for a room without air movement is a room where Dosha accumulates.

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 62-66

The wise builder places a Roshandaan above every doorway — this small light-and-air window keeps the room alive even when the door is shut. A dwelling where every room breathes through its Roshandaan is a dwelling where health flourishes, for stagnant Vayu breeds disease as stagnant water breeds mosquitoes.

MayamatamXI · 30-35

In every Kaksha (room) of the Griha, the Sthapati shall provide an Urdhva Vayu Marga (upper air path) — a ventilator above the lintel line that allows continuous Vayu Sanchara (air movement). This is not optional like a decorative element — it is as essential as the Dvara itself, for the door admits people and the ventilator admits Prana.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraXII · 28-32

Vishvakarma ordained that every room shall have its Shvasa Dwara (breathing gate) above the main entry. As a living being cannot survive without breathing, a room cannot function without its Vayu Marga. The Roshandaan is not merely a window — it is the room's nostril, through which stale Vayu exits and fresh Prana enters ceaselessly.

Vastu RatnakaraVI · 42-48

The Roshandaan is the ancient wisdom of continuous ventilation — a truth that modern sealed buildings have forgotten. Every room that breathes through its upper opening remains fresh, light, and free of accumulated Dosha. Every room that is sealed at the top becomes a repository of stale energy and disease-bearing Vayu.

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