
Penthouse and Top Floor
The penthouse or top-floor structure must concentrate its heaviest mass in the S
Local term: N/A (Penthouse, Top Floor, Terrace Floor)
Modern Vastu consensus prescribes that penthouse or top-floor construction concentrate mass in the SW quadrant. In setback penthouses (smaller than the floor below), the built portion should occupy the SW, leaving the NE as open terrace. Roof-mounted water tanks and HVAC units belong on the SW or S side. The NE of the topmost level should be the lightest, most open point of the entire building.
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis
Unique: Modern practice adds considerations for roof-mounted equipment — water tanks, HVAC units, and solar panels should concentrate on the SW/S side of the penthouse roof.
Penthouse and Top Floor
Architectural diagram for Penthouse and Top Floor
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
SW, S, W
The penthouse concentrates mass in the SW quadrant, leaving the NE open as terrace or garden — roof-mounted water tanks, HVAC units, and solar panels should concentrate on the SW/S side, and the NE of the topmost level should be the lightest, most open point of the entire building.
Acceptable
SE, NW
Full-floor penthouse with SW-weighted internal layout.
Prohibited
NE, N, E
Penthouse only in NE quadrant. Water tank on NE roof.
Sub-Rules
- Penthouse master bedroom or heaviest room is in the SW portion of the top floor▲ Moderate
- NE portion of the penthouse terrace is open, unbuilt, or has a garden▲ Moderate
- Penthouse footprint covers only the NE portion of the terrace, leaving SW open▼ Moderate
- Water tank or heavy HVAC unit on the NE side of the penthouse roof▼ Moderate

The penthouse or top-floor structure must concentrate its heaviest mass in the Southwest, extending the vertical height gradient — SW tallest, NE lowest. A setback penthouse should occupy the SW quadrant of the terrace, leaving the NE open. A NE-only penthouse inverts the height gradient and blocks cosmic energy descent.
Common Violations
Penthouse structure concentrated in the NE quadrant
Traditional consequence: The building becomes top-heavy on the divine side. Cosmic energy cannot descend through the NE — the household experiences spiritual stagnation, blocked growth, and mental burdens at elevated levels.
SW portion of the penthouse level is open/unbuilt while NE is constructed
Traditional consequence: The height gradient is inverted at the topmost level — the SW of the building lacks its crown. The earth-element anchor is weakened at the apex, creating instability that cascades down through all levels.
Heavy water tank or equipment on the NE side of the penthouse roof
Traditional consequence: Heavy weight at the NE apex of the building blocks the downward flow of divine energy. The topmost NE point must be the lightest point of the entire structure.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
North Indian Chaubara tradition provides a direct precedent for penthouse-level SW placement.
Wada Maadi (upper gallery) tradition places upper-level occupied space consistently in the S/W wings.
Tamil tradition uniquely applies Ayadi Shadvarga to upper-floor proportions — the penthouse dimensions must satisfy the six-formula verification.
Kakatiya tower construction demonstrates the principle at palatial scale — the tallest tower was always in the SW corner.
Jain tradition prescribes simplicity at the topmost level — penthouse design should be restrained rather than extravagant.
Kerala tradition extends the Muttam (courtyard opening) concept vertically — the NE of the top floor should open to the sky.
Gujarati Agashi (upper terrace room) tradition provides a direct precedent for penthouse-level SW placement in pol-house architecture.
Bengali Chilekotha tradition uniquely places the romantic/private top-floor room in the SW — a literary motif that aligns with Vastu prescription.
Kalinga Vimana tower proportions directly inform domestic penthouse height and positioning principles.
Punjabi Chaubara tradition directly supports penthouse-level SW placement.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Practical rearrangement following contemporary Vastu consultant recommendations
Modern VastuCombine structural correction with symbolic remedy for comprehensive remediation
Modern VastuPlace the master bedroom and heaviest furniture (wardrobes, safes) in the SW portion of the penthouse floor
Open the NE terrace area as a garden, sitting area, or sky-lit space rather than enclosing it
Relocate roof-mounted water tanks and HVAC units to the SW or S side of the penthouse roof
If the penthouse covers only NE, add a heavy stone or concrete planter wall along the SW parapet to symbolically weight the SW corner
Remedies from other traditions
Perform Vastu Shanti Homa to correct the energetic imbalance — Vedic fire ritual tradition
Vedic VastuPlace a copper Vastu Yantra in the affected area per North Indian Sthapati guidance
Apply the Hemadpanthi correction principle — structural adjustment following Pune Wada architectural tradition
HemadpanthiConsult a Maharashtrian Vastu Pandit for Tulsi Vrindavan placement as supplementary remedy
Classical Sources
“The dwelling shall ascend in height toward the Nairutya. Each successive level must preserve the principle: the Southwest is the tallest, the Northeast the lowest. The uppermost chamber belongs to the heavy quarter.”
“In multi-storied structures, the topmost Tala (floor) shall place its heaviest construction in the Nairutya direction. The Ishana quarter of the uppermost level shall remain open to the sky or bear the lightest construction.”
“When the Prasada rises to multiple levels, the upper floors shall not exceed the lower in the Ishanya direction. The height shall always favor the Nairutya — so the structure slopes downward toward the divine quarter.”
“Vishvakarma decrees that the uppermost dwelling level concentrate its mass in the Nairutya Kona. The penthouse chamber, being closest to the sky, must anchor itself in Earth's quarter lest it be destabilized by the Vayu element above.”
“The topmost storey of any Prasada shall preserve the directional weight distribution of the ground floor. If a partial upper storey is built, it shall occupy the Nairutya quadrant, leaving the Ishana open to celestial influence.”

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