
Public-Private Gradient
The dwelling should flow from public to private — entrance and living nearest th
Local term: Public-private gradient, spatial hierarchy, zoning, privacy gradient (Public-private gradient, spatial hierarchy, zoning, privacy gradient)
The public-private gradient is unanimously supported across all traditions and is a fundamental principle of modern architectural planning. It protects privacy, creates natural circulation, and organizes the home into clear functional zones. Modern apartments achieve this through entrance → living room → corridor → bedrooms sequence.
Unique: Modern architectural planning validates this as a universal principle — privacy, acoustic separation, and functional zoning all improve with the public-private gradient.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
Entrance → Living → Dining → Corridor → Bedrooms sequence. — The dwelling should be organized as a gradient from public to private — entrance and living room near the front, dining room in the middle, and bedrooms and private spaces at the back or upper floors. This gradient creates a natural progression from the outer world to the inner sanctum.
Acceptable
Any clear separation of public and private zones.
Prohibited
Bedrooms visible from entrance. Master bedroom opening onto living room.
Sub-Rules
- Clear public-to-private gradient from entrance to bedrooms▲ Critical
- Bedrooms visible or audible from the front entrance▼ Critical
- Master bedroom opens directly onto the living room without corridor▼ Major
- Guest room/guest bathroom near the entrance for visitor use▲ Moderate

Principle & Context

The dwelling should flow from public to private — entrance and living nearest the door, dining in the middle, bedrooms farthest from entry. This gradient mirrors the temple's progression from outer prakara to inner Garbhagriha. Bedrooms must never be visible or audible from the entrance. A clear public-private separation protects rest, privacy, and the household's inner sanctity.
Common Violations
Bedrooms visible or accessible directly from the entrance
Traditional consequence: The private sanctum is exposed to the public gaze. The resting zone loses its protective boundary. Occupants feel perpetually surveilled and cannot fully relax. Privacy — both physical and energetic — is compromised.
Master bedroom opening directly onto living room
Traditional consequence: The most private space connects to the most public without transition. The master bedroom's Earth energy is constantly agitated by the living room's social energy. Marital privacy is compromised.
No clear functional gradient — public and private rooms mixed randomly
Traditional consequence: The dwelling lacks spatial hierarchy. Energy has no natural flow direction. Occupants feel the home has no center, no refuge, no gradual progression from activity to rest.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vastu Purusha body metaphor for the public-private gradient.
Wada Chowk as the transition between public and private zones.
Thinnai (front porch) as the outermost public reception space.
Telugu domestic planning uses the front-inner gradient as a core principle.
Jain tradition adds a sacral endpoint — the Jinalaya — to the privacy gradient.
Nalukettu sequence is the ideal demonstration of the public-private gradient.
Haveli Otla-Baithak-Chowk-Andar sequence is a classic gradient.
Bengali Baithak-khana and Andar-mahal terms encode the gradient.
Temple concentric-zone model directly applied to domestic planning.
Sikh tradition places the prayer room in the private inner zone.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Living room near entrance. Bedrooms at far end. Corridor as transition.
Modern VastuUse a corridor or passage to separate the bedroom zone from the living room zone — even a short L-shaped turn blocking the sightline helps
Place a heavy curtain, folding screen, or partial partition between the living room and the bedroom corridor to create a visual barrier
If bedrooms open directly onto the living room, install bedroom doors that are solid and well-fitted — not glass or louvered
In multi-story homes, place all bedrooms on upper floors and all public spaces (living, dining, guest room) on the ground floor
Remedies from other traditions
Living room at entrance. Bedrooms at back or upper floors.
Vedic VastuMaintain Baithak-Antahpura sequence in apartment layout.
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The dwelling's chambers shall proceed from the public to the private — the gathering hall near the entry, the sleeping chambers at the far end. The stranger sees the Mandapa (hall); only the family enters the Antahpura (inner chamber). This progression protects the householder's privacy as the temple's prakara walls protect the Garbhagriha.”
“The rooms nearest the door are for assembly and reception. As one moves deeper into the dwelling, the spaces become more private, more intimate. The innermost room — the sleeping chamber — is the householder's sanctum, accessible only to family.”
“The wise householder places the hall of gathering near the gate and the chamber of rest at the dwelling's depth. The guest is received in the outer rooms; the family retreats to the inner rooms. This protects modesty, privacy, and the sanctity of rest.”
“Vishvakarma arranges the dwelling as a series of zones — the Bahir-bhaga (outer zone) for guests and gatherings, the Madhya-bhaga (middle zone) for daily function, and the Antar-bhaga (inner zone) for sleep and privacy. This gradient is the body of Vastu Purusha itself — his face at the door, his heart in the middle, his rest at the sanctum.”
“The Harmya (palace) is arranged in concentric zones of decreasing accessibility. The outermost is public; the innermost is private. The dwelling, however humble, must follow this principle — the progression from the known to the intimate.”

Check Your Floor Plan