Room Placement
RP-119★☆☆ Moderate Full Details

Skylight Placement

Skylights should be at the center (Brahmasthan) or NE of the dwelling — channeli

Space NE
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: Skylight, sun-tube, light-pipe, roof window, atrium glazing (Skylight, sun-tube, light-pipe, roof window, atrium glazing)

Modern Vastu practice treats skylights as essential for apartments and homes without courtyards. The center or NE placement is unanimously recommended. Practitioners advise against south-facing skylights due to heat and harsh light. Modern sun-tubes and light-pipes offer cost-effective alternatives to full skylights.

Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis

Unique: Modern sun-tubes and light-pipes allow skylight installation in almost any ceiling position at low cost — making this ancient principle accessible to all homes.

RP-119

Skylight Placement

Architectural diagram for Skylight Placement

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The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

NE, center

Skylight at center or NE — modern Nadumuttam. Controlled glazing for heat management. — Skylights should be placed in the center of the dwelling (Brahmasthan) or in the NE quadrant — the zone of Space (Akasha) and divine light. A skylight at the center channels cosmic energy directly into the dwelling's core, functioning as a modern Nadumuttam (open courtyard).

Acceptable

N, E, center

Skylight on the N or E side. Sun-tube in the center.

Prohibited

SW, S

Skylight only in SW with NE/center sealed. South-facing skylight without heat control.

Sub-Rules

  • Skylight in the center or NE quadrant of the dwelling Major
  • Skylight only in the SW quadrant with NE and center having no sky access Major
  • Skylight creates a visible light-shaft or sun-patch that moves across the room Moderate
  • Skylight is large enough to create significant heat during summer Moderate

Principle & Context

Skylights should be at the center (Brahmasthan) or NE of the dwelling — channeling cosmic Akasha into the Space element zone. A SW skylight pierces the Earth anchor zone. Skylights should bring light without excessive heat, serving as modern substitutes for the traditional open-to-sky courtyard.

Common Violations

Skylight only in SW with NE and center fully enclosed

Traditional consequence: The Earth anchor zone is pierced by the sky — the heaviest, most solid quadrant loses its enclosure and compression. The SW skylight channels uncontrolled solar energy into the authority zone, creating instability. The NE and center remain sealed from cosmic light — the divine quarter is in darkness.

Oversized skylight causing excessive heat

Traditional consequence: A skylight that overheats the dwelling introduces uncontrolled Agni (fire) Tattva through a Space-element opening. The beneficial Akasha connection becomes an Agni burden — too much solar intensity overwhelms the dwelling's energy balance.

Skylight directly above the cooking area

Traditional consequence: The Fire zone (kitchen) receives additional Fire energy from above through sky-channeled sunlight. This doubles the Agni load in an already fire-intensive zone, potentially creating excessive heat and irritability in those who cook.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Vedic tradition treats the skylight as a Brahmadvara — a divine portal, not merely a lighting device.

Hemadpanthi

The Wada Chowk is the original 'skylight' — the modern skylight should replicate its central/NE position.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil tradition uses traditional Jali panels and tile gaps as naturally integrated 'skylights'.

Kakatiya

Kakatiya open-to-sky mandapas serve as the precedent for modern skylight placement.

Hoysala-Jain

Hoysala temple ceiling perforations are the most artistically developed form of controlled 'skylight' in Indian architecture.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala treats the modern skylight as a Nadumuttam Pakaram — a necessary substitute for the traditional courtyard.

Haveli-Jain

Gujarati Haveli multi-Chowk design provides multiple sky connections — modern skylights replicate this at a smaller scale.

Vishwakarma

Modern apartment skylights are particularly valuable in Bengali urban homes due to dense construction blocking lateral light.

Kalinga

Kalinga Deula roof perforations inspire domestic skylight design.

Sikh-Vedic

Sikh tradition treats the skylight as a Parkash-dwara — a portal for divine illumination.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: Skylight, sun-tube, light-pipe, roof window, atrium glazing (Skylight, sun-tube, light-pipe, roof window, atrium glazing)
Deity: Brahma / Ishana
Element: Space
Planet: Brihaspati
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Use frosted or tinted glazing to control heat

Modern Vastu

Install motorized blinds for afternoon sun management

Modern Vastu

Place a small water feature or crystal below the skylight to amplify light distribution

Modern Vastu

If the only skylight is in the SW, add a second smaller skylight or sun-tube in the NE or center to balance the sky-access distribution

structural15,000–₹60,000high

Use translucent rather than transparent glazing on a SW skylight to diffuse harsh direct sunlight and reduce the Fire element intensity

structural5,000–₹20,000medium

Install a motorized shade or blind on the skylight to control solar intensity — open in the morning, filtered in the afternoon

structural10,000–₹40,000medium

Place a water feature or reflective element directly below the NE or center skylight to amplify the Akasha-Jala connection

elemental3,000–₹15,000medium

Remedies from other traditions

Place a Vastu Yantra at the affected zone per Brihat Samhita prescription

Vedic Vastu

Vedic Agni Hotra at the transition point to purify and harmonize spatial energy

Apply Hemadpanthi spatial correction principles for skylight placement

Hemadpanthi

Tulsi Vrindavan placement to purify the affected zone

Classical Sources

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 10-15

The roof of the griha may have an opening at its crown — the Brahmadvara — through which the sky enters the dwelling. This opening shall be above the Brahmasthan or toward the Ishanya, where Akasha Tattva is strongest and the light of Surya first touches the dwelling.

ManasaraXXVI · 18-25

An opening in the roof — the Murdha-dwara (skull-door) — allows Akasha to penetrate the dwelling from above. It shall be positioned at the center or toward the Ishanya quadrant, where cosmic light descends without excessive heat.

MayamatamXIV · 22-28

The dwelling's connection to the sky above is through the Akasha-chidra (sky-perforation) in the roof. This opening brings divine light into the griha and shall be placed where Akasha Tattva concentrates — the center or the Uttara-Purva quadrant.

Samarangana SutradharaXIV · 35-42

The architect may pierce the roof for light and air, but only in the Brahmasthan or the Ishanya sector. An opening in the Nairutya roof weakens the dwelling's crown at the very point where mass and solidity are most needed.

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