
The Terrace Usage Rules
Heavy items in SW of terrace, NE open — weight gradient at roof level
Local term: Terrace layout, overhead tank placement (Terrace layout, overhead tank placement)
Modern Vastu consensus treats terrace weight distribution as one of the most impactful and easily verifiable rules. Overhead tank placement is a simple binary check — SW is correct, NE is a clear violation. This rule is popular in Vastu consultations because it is actionable and has visible results.
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis
Unique: Modern practice emphasizes this as a high-impact, low-cost correction — overhead tank relocation is one of the most recommended interventions.
The Terrace Usage Rules
Architectural diagram for The Terrace Usage Rules
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
SW
On the terrace, heavy objects (overhead tank, AC outdoor units, heavy planters, built structures) should concentrate in the Southwest quadrant. The Northeast quadrant must remain the lightest, most open area — ideally unbuilt and uncluttered.
Acceptable
S, W
South or West zones of the terrace are acceptable for heavy items and built structures. The general principle: weight gradient from heavy SW to light NE must be maintained even at terrace level.
Prohibited
NE
The NE quadrant of the terrace must remain open and unobstructed. Building a room, placing an overhead tank, or cluttering the NE of the terrace suppresses the cosmic energy entry point from above.
Sub-Rules
- Overhead water tank in SW of terrace▲ Moderate
- NE quadrant of terrace is open and unbuilt▲ Moderate
- Built room or heavy structure in NE of terrace▼ Moderate

The terrace is a miniature floor plan at the highest level. The SW-heavy, NE-light gradient applies here just as it does on the ground floor. Overhead tanks and built structures go SW; NE remains open to the sky.
Common Violations
Overhead tank in Northeast of terrace
Traditional consequence: Heavy water load suppresses the cosmic energy entry point — blocks prosperity and divine grace descending from above
Built room (mumty/penthouse) in NE of terrace
Traditional consequence: Construction in the NE at the highest point of the structure completely seals the cosmic energy pathway
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition applies the identical directional grid at every level — no simplification for the terrace.
Wada gadi terraces maintained SW-heavy principle for structural elements while keeping NE open for evening sky views.
Tamil tradition applies full Ayadi calculations to terrace-level structures — not simplified rules.
Temple Vimana terrace principles directly inform Kakatiya residential terrace guidelines.
Hoysala multi-level temple design demonstrates consistent weight gradient from base to pinnacle — the same applies to residential terraces.
Kerala tradition treats terrace overhead tank placement as one of the most critical decisions in multi-story home design.
The Haveli agasiya is treated as a full living level — not just a utility terrace — and follows complete directional rules.
Bengali tradition is pragmatic about terrace usage but maintains the non-negotiable NE-lightest principle.
Kalinga temple Bada Deul flat-roof design informs residential terrace weight distribution.
Sikh tradition uses the terrace Barsati space for evening Rehras prayers — making NE openness spiritually significant.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Relocating an overhead tank from NE to SW is one of the highest-ROI Vastu corrections available.
Modern VastuClear clutter from NE quadrant of terrace — move heavy items to SW side
Relocate overhead water tank to SW corner if currently in NE
Place a Tulsi plant or small water feature in the NE corner of the terrace
Ensure terrace floor slopes toward NE/E for rainwater drainage
Remedies from other traditions
Relocate terrace toward the Nairutya zone — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan tradition
Vedic VastuRelocate terrace toward the Nairutya zone — Hemadpanthi stone remediation tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The upper platform of the dwelling shall maintain the weight gradient of the lower levels — heavy in Nairutya, light in Ishaan.”
“Upon the roof, let not the Ishaan quadrant bear any load. The water vessel and the built shelter must rest in the Nairutya.”
“The science of building prescribes the Southwest (Nairutya) for the terrace usage rules, recognizing the Earth governance of this orientation.”
“For the terrace usage rules, the Southwest (Nairutya) is prescribed — here the Earth force sustains the feature as the treatise instructs.”
“Regarding the terrace usage rules, the Sthapati tradition locates it in the Southwest (Nairutya), the quarter governed by Earth, for the welfare of all inhabitants.”

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