Multi-Story Rules
MS-024★☆☆ Moderate Full Details

Setback by Floor

Upper-floor setbacks must recede from S and W, preserving full volume toward N a

Air N/E
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: Setback Direction by Floor (Setback Direction by Floor — upper floors recede from S/W, preserving N/E volume)

All traditions agree that upper-floor setbacks should recede from S/W, preserving N/E volume. Modern building bylaws often require setbacks from all sides — Vastu-aware architects can comply by placing the maximum N/E volume within the reduced footprint. The principle aligns with solar design and morning-light optimization.

Unique: Modern building bylaws can be satisfied while preserving the Vastu setback principle — the key is where the remaining upper-floor volume concentrates, not whether setback occurs.

MS-024

Setback by Floor

Architectural diagram for Setback by Floor

RadialGrid9163281○ MarmaNorthLivingNNELivingNortheastLivingENELivingEastLivingESELivingSoutheastSSESouthSSWSouthwestWSWWestWNWNorthwestNNWLivingNNNENEENEEESESESSESSSWSWWSWWWNWNWNNWCenterBrahmaIdealProhibitedAirguruvastu.comgv01<!-- gv-origin:guruvastu.com -->

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

N, E, NE

Upper-floor setback from S/W, N/E at full extent, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.

Acceptable

N, NE, E, NW, SE

Equal setback with NE volume maximized within reduced footprint.

Prohibited

SW, S, W

Upper-floor setback from N/E while maintaining S/W volume.

Sub-Rules

  • Upper-floor setback recedes from S and W, preserving volume toward N/E Moderate
  • Setback terrace on S/W side used as open balcony (correct recession) Moderate
  • Upper-floor setback recedes from N and E, maintaining volume toward S/W Major
  • Upper floor enclosed in NE with setback terrace on SW side Major

Upper-floor setbacks must recede from S and W, preserving full volume toward N and E. The dwelling shrinks inward from the heavy directions at altitude, exposing more of its crown to light and air from the N/E. Setbacks from the N/E side reverse the fundamental light-heavy gradient.

Common Violations

Upper floor recedes from N/E while maintaining volume toward S/W

Traditional consequence: The dwelling's crown loses its light-gathering surfaces — Prana entry at altitude is blocked. The NE, which should be the most open zone at every level, becomes enclosed while the SW opens up. Reversal of the setback gradient.

Upper floor enclosed in NE with open setback terrace on SW side

Traditional consequence: The worst setback defect — heavy enclosure where lightness is needed, open space where weight is needed. The building's crown reverses the fundamental NE-light/SW-heavy gradient at its most exposed level.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

The Prana-Graha (energy-receiving) surface concept — N/E faces are the dwelling's cosmic energy receivers, which must not be diminished at altitude.

Hemadpanthi

Wada courtyard orientation ensures N/E faces remain unreceded — the courtyard provides the light-gathering function.

Agama Sthapati

Pada grid face retention — the N/E Pada faces must not lose their grid extent at altitude.

Kakatiya

Telugu Venakki-Jarigipoyindi (receding backward) terminology — the setback is described as the building stepping back from its heavy side.

Hoysala-Jain

Hoysala Vimana tier recession — the architectural model for directional setback at altitude.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala Nila-Kurayyal (floor reduction) — Thachu Shastra's specific term for upper-floor footprint reduction.

Haveli-Jain

Narrow-plot constraints limit setback direction options — but the principle still guides which side is preferred.

Vishwakarma

Dense urban-plot constraints — Bengali practice adapts the principle to row-house and apartment contexts.

Kalinga

Deula inner-mass shifting — the temple tower's inner structure concentrates toward S/W even as the outer profile appears uniform.

Sikh-Vedic

Punjabi kothi S-W recession creating a terrace on the afternoon-sun side.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: Setback Direction by Floor (Setback Direction by Floor — upper floors recede from S/W, preserving N/E volume)
Deity: Kubera (N) / Indra (E)
Element: Water (Jala) / Fire (Agni)

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Design setback from S/W in architectural phase (best). Large N/E windows to compensate for required N/E setback (moderate). Heavy elements on S/W setback terrace (elemental).

Modern Vastu

Design upper-floor setbacks to recede from S/W sides, preserving N/E faces at full extent — address during architectural design phase for maximum effectiveness

structural0–₹0high

If setback occurs on N/E (regulatory requirement), add floor-to-ceiling glass or large windows on the N/E faces of the upper floor to restore openness and light penetration

structural20,000–₹80,000medium

Use the S/W setback terrace for heavy earth-element elements (large planters, stone features) to anchor the receding side and maintain the weight gradient even in the recessed zone

elemental10,000–₹40,000medium

Remedies from other traditions

Multi-story structural correction per Vedic vertical proportion rules

Vedic Vastu

Multi-story structural correction per Maharashtrian vertical proportion rules

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

ManasaraXVI · 37-44

When the upper level is narrower than the base, the recession shall be from the Dakshina (South) and Paschima (West). The Uttara (North) and Purva (East) shall retain their full extent at altitude. The dwelling shrinks inward from the heavy directions, exposing more of its crown to the light directions.

MayamatamXII · 29-35

The reduced upper level shall maintain its North and East faces flush with the base. The setback occurs from the South and West — creating a terrace on the heavy side while preserving the light side's full height. The dwelling tapers toward Nairitya (SW), not toward Ishanya (NE).

Samarangana SutradharaXIV · 41-48

Upper levels that recede shall do so from the Dakshina-Paschima (South-West) quadrant. The dwelling's crown preserves its Uttara-Purva (North-East) extent. Just as the earth recedes from the sun's path, leaving the sky open to the east, the dwelling recedes from the heavy side, leaving the light side open.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraVIII · 57-63

Vishvakarma instructs that setbacks from the upper levels shall not diminish the Northern or Eastern face. The dwelling may shrink from the South and West — these heavy directions lose volume at altitude without harm. But the N/E faces at the crown are the dwelling's light-gathering surfaces — they must not recede.

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