
Meeting Table Shape
The shape of the meeting table determines the quality and efficiency of decision
Local term: मीटिंग टेबल — आयताकार/अंडाकार (Meeting Table — Āyatākāra/Aṇḍākāra)
Modern Vastu consultants widely recommend rectangular conference tables aligned to cardinal axes. Oval tables are a popular compromise — directional but softer. Circular tables are increasingly used in agile/scrum environments but are not recommended for decision-making meetings.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Shastra compilations
Unique: Modern practice distinguishes meeting types: rectangular for executive decisions, oval for strategy/brainstorming, round for team bonding/retrospectives. The shape should match the meeting's intent, not be one-size-fits-all.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
Rectangular or oval meeting tables aligned to the building's cardinal axes. The authority/facilitator sits at the short end facing North or East.
Acceptable
Square tables for small meetings. Round tables acceptable for informal team bonding, not executive decisions.
Prohibited
L-shaped, T-shaped, or irregularly shaped tables create power imbalances. Diagonally placed tables scatter collective energy.
Sub-Rules
- Meeting table is rectangular with proportional length-to-width ratio▲ Moderate
- Meeting table is oval or racetrack-shaped (aligned to cardinal axis)▲ Moderate
- Meeting table is circular (diffuses authority and decision-making)▼ Moderate
- Meeting table is L-shaped, T-shaped, or irregularly shaped▼ Moderate
- Table's long axis aligned with North-South or East-West cardinal axis▲ Moderate
- Table placed diagonally to the room (not aligned with cardinal walls)▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

The shape of the meeting table determines the quality and efficiency of decisions made around it. Rectangular and oval tables create clear authority positions, cardinal-axis alignment, and directional energy flow — resulting in decisive, productive meetings. Circular tables diffuse authority and prolong discussions. Irregular shapes create power imbalances. This is a form/shape principle, not a compass-direction principle.
Common Violations
Circular meeting table used for decision-making meetings
Traditional consequence: Decisions stall — no clear authority position, circular energy loops without resolution. Meetings run long with no conclusion. Good for brainstorming, poor for executive decisions.
L-shaped or irregular meeting table
Traditional consequence: Power imbalance — some participants at the junction receive more energy, others at the extremes are marginalized. Communication gaps, missed decisions, and factional dynamics.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The Vedic tradition explicitly prohibits circular seating for governance — the circle is for Yajna (ritual fire), not for Rajya Sabha (state council). Decision-making requires a head (authority) and a direction (goal).
Maharashtrian tradition adds that the table's wood should be heavy and dark — representing earth element solidity for firm decisions.
Tamil tradition draws a direct parallel between the conference table and the temple Mandapa — both are rectangular, both have a clear axis, both have authority at the head. Round tables are for 'Panchayat' (village gatherings), not for corporate decisions.
Telugu tradition specifies a 2:1 or 3:1 length-to-width ratio for rectangular conference tables — proportions that mirror the golden ratio principles found in Kakatiya temple mandapas.
Jain tradition adds that the meeting table surface should be uncluttered during discussions — only the agenda before each participant. Clutter on the table scatters the collective energy of the assembly.
Kerala tradition draws a fractal principle: the meeting table shape should mirror the room shape, which mirrors the building shape. Rectangular room = rectangular table. This concordance amplifies the earth-element stability.
Gujarati tradition specifies that the Sheth's position at the head should be slightly elevated or in a larger chair — the head position must be visually distinct. Equal-sized chairs around a round table is 'Sankirna Shakti' (confused power).
Bengali tradition adds that the conference table should have an even number of seats — uneven seating creates an asymmetric energy imbalance. The number 8, 12, or 16 are particularly auspicious numbers of seats.
Kalinga tradition draws from the Jagamohana — the proportions of the meeting table should echo the proportions of the room. A table too small or too large for its room creates 'Avakasha Dosha' (space defect).
Sikh-Vedic tradition adds an egalitarian note: while the table is rectangular, the head position rotates depending on the meeting's topic — the subject-matter expert sits at the head, not always the senior leader.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Ensure the All zone has optimal lighting, ventilation, and ergonomic furniture — modern commercial Vastu standard
Modern VastuApply Vastu-compliant interior design with appropriate elemental colors in the All zone — contemporary practice
Modern VastuReplace circular or irregular tables with rectangular or oval conference tables
Align the table's long axis with the North-South or East-West direction of the room
If a circular table cannot be replaced, place a rectangular centerpiece or runner to create a visual axis
Remedies from other traditions
Perform Vastu Shanti puja in the All zone of the office to align commercial energy — Vedic North Indian tradition
Vedic VastuPlace a copper Yantra corresponding to the directional deity on the All wall — Varanasi Sthapati practice
Apply Hemadpanthi stone-quality construction principles to the All zone — Maharashtrian commercial Vastu standard
HemadpanthiConsecrate the All zone with turmeric and kumkum during the Vastu Puja ceremony — Peshwa-era office tradition
Classical Sources
“The sabha (assembly hall) shall have a rectangular form aligned with the cardinal axes. The Pitha (seat) of assembly should follow the Chatushkona (four-cornered) shape for balanced discourse.”
“For the hall of counsel, the arrangement shall be four-sided and proportionate. An oblong form with pleasing proportions invites clear speech and resolution. Forms without clear axis scatter the mind.”
“The council chamber shall be rectangular, and the king shall sit at the head facing North or East. Circular arrangements are for ritual, not governance — for governance demands directionality.”
“The shape of the meeting place determines the quality of decisions made within. A rectangular mandapa aligned to the grid produces agreement; an irregular mandapa produces dissent.”

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