Room Placement
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Double Door Room Throughway

A room with two doors should not have them directly aligned on opposite walls —

Air
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: Throughway, cross-draft, door alignment, wind tunnel (Throughway, cross-draft, door alignment, wind tunnel)

Modern Vastu practice frequently encounters the throughway problem in apartments — entry door aligned with balcony door through the living room is the most common case. Practitioners universally recommend breaking the sightline with a bookshelf, screen, tall plant, or heavy curtain.

Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis

Unique: Modern apartment entry-to-balcony alignment is the most common throughway problem — practitioners have specific furniture-placement solutions.

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

Two doors on adjacent walls — no throughway. Room retains energy. — A room with two doors should have them positioned so that they do not create a straight throughway — a direct visual and physical line from one door to the other. When two doors are aligned, prana enters through one and exits through the other without circulating within the room, creating an energy bypass.

Acceptable

Offset or screened alignment. Furniture breaks the sightline.

Prohibited

Directly aligned doors with no barrier — energy throughway.

Sub-Rules

  • Two doors on adjacent walls, not creating a straight throughway Moderate
  • Two doors directly aligned on opposite walls — creating a straight throughway Moderate
  • Furniture or screen breaks the sightline between two aligned doors Minor
  • Bedroom with aligned doors creating throughway wind draft during sleep Moderate

Principle & Context

A room with two doors should not have them directly aligned on opposite walls — this creates a throughway that bleeds energy. Doors should be on adjacent walls or offset so prana circulates within the room before exiting. Furniture or screens between aligned doors serve as remedies.

Common Violations

Two doors directly aligned on opposite walls in a bedroom

Traditional consequence: The sleeping space becomes a wind tunnel — prana rushes through without accumulating. The occupant receives no nourishing energy during sleep. Physical drafts across the bed disturb sleep. The bedroom loses its essential quality of stillness and containment.

Two doors aligned creating a throughway in the living room

Traditional consequence: Social energy cannot accumulate — conversations and family bonding energy are carried out through the second door. The living room feels transient rather than gathering. Visitors do not feel comfortable lingering.

Main entry door and back exit directly aligned through the dwelling

Traditional consequence: Prana entering the dwelling immediately exits — the entire home becomes a throughway. Wealth and opportunities enter and leave without being retained. The family experiences a pattern of incoming fortune that never stays.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Vedic tradition names the aligned-door configuration 'Vayu-nala' — a wind channel that depletes the room.

Hemadpanthi

Wada architecture naturally avoids throughways through courtyard-centric room access.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil tradition names the effect 'Vayu-kutthu' (wind-stab) — sharp piercing energy through the room.

Kakatiya

Kakatiya palace rooms deliberately avoid linear door alignment for security and energy circulation.

Hoysala-Jain

Jain emphasis on peaceful containment strengthens the anti-throughway principle.

Thachu Shastra

Nalukettu L-access design naturally prevents through-room wind tunnels.

Haveli-Jain

Gujarati tradition links the throughway effect to financial loss — prosperity enters and exits without staying.

Vishwakarma

Bengali apartments' entry-to-balcony alignment is the most common modern throughway problem.

Kalinga

Kalinga temple chamber offset-door design inspires domestic two-door room planning.

Sikh-Vedic

Gurdwara door placement (multiple offset doors) demonstrates the anti-throughway principle at community scale.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: Throughway, cross-draft, door alignment, wind tunnel (Throughway, cross-draft, door alignment, wind tunnel)
Deity: Vayu
Element: Air
Planet: Budha
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Place a bookshelf or room divider perpendicular to the sightline between aligned doors

Modern Vastu

Use a heavy curtain on one door

Modern Vastu

If both doors must stay open for ventilation, a tall indoor plant between them provides a living barrier

Modern Vastu

Place a room divider, bookshelf, or screen between two aligned doors to break the direct sightline and force energy to circulate

furniture3,000–₹15,000high

Hang a heavy curtain on one of the two aligned doors — keep it drawn when both doors are open to prevent throughway drafts

furniture1,000–₹5,000medium

Keep one of the two aligned doors closed when possible — a single open door converts the throughway back into a single-entry room

behavioral0–₹0medium

If renovation is possible, shift one door by at least 3-4 feet to break the direct alignment

structural10,000–₹40,000high

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 double door room throughway

Hemadpanthi

Tulsi Vrindavan placement to purify the affected zone

Classical Sources

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 55-60

A chamber with two Dwaras (doors) shall not place them on a straight line — Vayu entering through one rushes out the other without lingering. The room becomes a passage, not a dwelling space. The doors must be offset or on adjacent walls so that air turns and circulates within.

ManasaraXXXIV · 55-62

When two openings exist in one chamber, they shall not face each other in alignment. The architect must ensure that prana entering from one Dwara encounters a wall or furniture before finding the second Dwara, so that it circulates within the chamber and blesses the occupants.

MayamatamXVIII · 30-35

Two doors in a room should be placed on walls that meet at a corner, not on walls that face each other. A room with aligned doors on opposing walls becomes a Vayu-nala (wind channel) — energy flows through without nourishing the space.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraIX · 40-46

Vishvakarma taught that when a room must have two doors, they should be offset from each other by at least the width of a man's outstretched arms. If aligned, a heavy curtain or a piece of furniture placed between them deflects the throughway and forces Vayu to circulate.

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