
Hospital Chapel / Prayer Room
The hospital prayer room is the spiritual heart of the healing facility — where
Local term: प्रार्थना कक्ष / नॉर्थ-ईस्ट (Prārthanā Kakṣa / Nŏrth-Īsṭ)
Modern hospital Vastu prescribes a multi-faith prayer or meditation room in the NE. Contemporary hospitals increasingly recognize the clinical value of spiritual care spaces. Contemporary evidence-based healthcare design research and WHO hospital design guidelines corroborate this traditional spatial prescription through measurable patient outcome data.
Source: Contemporary healthcare design standards; WHO spiritual care guidelines
Unique: Modern practice creates interfaith spaces with natural light, water features, and nature views — combining Vastu principles with evidence-based design for spiritual care.
Hospital Chapel / Prayer Room
Architectural diagram for Hospital Chapel / Prayer Room

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
NE
Hospital prayer or meditation room should be in the Northeast zone with natural light and peaceful ambience.
Acceptable
N, E, NNE, ENE
North or East zone placement with NE-facing orientation is acceptable.
Prohibited
SW, S, SE
Prayer room in the SW or S zone places devotion in the mortality quarter.
Sub-Rules
- Interfaith prayer room in NE with natural light and quiet environment▲ Major
- Prayer room in N or E zone with peaceful, clean ambience▲ Moderate
- Prayer room in W or NW zone▼ Moderate
- Prayer room in SW or S zone — devotion in the death quarter▼ Major

Principle & Context

The hospital prayer room is the spiritual heart of the healing facility — where patients, families, and staff seek divine grace in moments of crisis. The NE zone, governed by Ishana and infused with the Water element's purifying energy, is the gateway between mortal suffering and divine compassion. Prayer offered from the NE ascends most directly to the divine.
Common Violations
Prayer room in SW or S zone — devotion in the mortality quarter
Traditional consequence: Prayers offered in the death-direction lose their uplifting power. Patients and families find little solace in a chapel situated where dissolution energy dominates — spiritual comfort is undermined.
No prayer or meditation space in the hospital
Traditional consequence: The spiritual dimension of healing is neglected. Without a dedicated sacred space, the hospital's prana environment lacks the devotional anchor that amplifies all healing efforts.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
North Indian hospitals perform daily Dhanvantari Aarti in the NE prayer room — believed to activate healing prana for the entire hospital.
Maharashtrian hospitals use a Tulsi Vrindavan (holy basil planter) in the NE prayer room — combining devotion with Ayurvedic air purification.
Tamil hospitals perform Dhanvantari Homam (fire ritual) in the NE prayer room on auspicious days for hospital-wide healing energy.
Telugu tradition includes a Navagraha panel in the NE prayer room — patients pray for planetary favor in their healing.
Jain hospitals emphasize a meditation-focused NE space rather than deity worship — the Dhyana Kaksha (meditation room) for quiet contemplation.
Kerala tradition uses a copper Nilavilakku (standing lamp) in the NE prayer room — the lamp is lit continuously as a symbol of healing consciousness.
Jain hospitals in Gujarat create multi-faith prayer rooms with separate alcoves for Hindu, Muslim, Jain, and other traditions — all in the NE zone.
Bengali tradition includes a Shanti Jal (sanctified water) vessel in the NE prayer room — water blessed during morning prayers is offered to patients.
Kalinga tradition maintains a Mahaprasad offering in the NE prayer room — blessed food from the Jagannath tradition given to patients.
Sikh hospitals recite Sukhmani Sahib and Japji Sahib in the NE prayer room — healing Shabads (hymns) broadcast to patient wards.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
NE interfaith prayer room with natural light and water feature — modern standard
Modern VastuCreate a dedicated interfaith prayer room in the NE zone with natural light and quiet ambience
If NE is unavailable, place the prayer room in the N or E zone with a NE-facing altar or meditation focal point
Install a small NE prayer niche or Dhanvantari shrine in each ward's NE corner as a supplement to the main chapel
Place a water feature (fountain or small vessel) in the NE of the prayer room to enhance the Water element's purifying energy
Remedies from other traditions
NE prayer room with daily Dhanvantari Aarti — North Indian standard
Vedic VastuNE prayer room with Tulsi Vrindavan — Maharashtrian tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The chamber of prayer within the healing house shall face Ishanya, where divine consciousness descends upon the afflicted. In this quarter, the prayers of the sick ascend most swiftly to the gods, and heavenly grace flows down to comfort the suffering.”
“The puja sthan within the chikitsalaya occupies the Ishanya kona, for this is the gateway between the mortal and the divine. Here, the healer and the patient alike seek the blessings of Dhanvantari and the grace of Ishana.”
“In the northeast of the healing house, a sacred space for prayer and meditation is established. The water element purifies the prayers, and the closeness to heaven's gate ensures they reach the divine ear without obstruction.”
“Vishvakarma ordains: the devata-griha within the vaidyashala shall be in the Ishanya quarter, where the patient's soul may commune with the divine and receive the spiritual healing that transcends all medicine.”

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