
Guest Seating Direction
Guests sit in the NW (Vayu's transient quarter) or East (Indra's welcoming quart
Local term: Guest seating zone, visitor quadrant, Vayu corner (Guest seating zone, visitor quadrant, Vayu corner)
Modern Vastu practice recommends arranging living room furniture so that guest seating naturally falls in the NW or E sections, with the host's preferred seat in the SW. An L-shaped sofa with the host's end in the SW and guest end in the NW achieves this naturally.
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis
Unique: Modern furniture configurations (L-shaped sofas) naturally create the host-SW, guest-NW layout recommended by tradition.
Guest Seating Direction
Architectural diagram for Guest Seating Direction

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
NW, E
Guest seating in NW or E facing host in SW. — in Modern Vastu Consensus practice, the Northwest or East zone is prescribed as the ideal placement, following the Air element's natural affinity with this direction. The Modern Vastu Consensus Sthapati verifies this placement as part of the comprehensive room-arrangement audit.
Acceptable
N, NE
Guest in N or NE for honored visitors.
Prohibited
SW
Guest in SW — displaces the host's authority.
Sub-Rules
- Guest seating in the NW or E section of the living room▲ Moderate
- Guests face South or West (toward the host in SW)▲ Moderate
- Guests seated in the SW corner — host's authority position▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

Guests sit in the NW (Vayu's transient quarter) or East (Indra's welcoming quarter), facing the host in the SW. The SW is reserved for the family head — guests in the SW disrupt household hierarchy.
Common Violations
Guest seated in the Southwest — host's authority corner
Traditional consequence: The guest energetically assumes the household's governing position. Social hierarchy is inverted — the guest's influence grows while the host's authority diminishes. Repeated SW seating of guests leads to the host feeling undermined in their own home.
Guest facing East with back to West (in the East quadrant)
Traditional consequence: The guest's back is toward the host in the SW — the conversational dynamic is broken. The guest symbolically turns away from the host's authority, creating social awkwardness and energetic disconnection.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition frames guest seating as part of Atithi-Dharma — a sacred duty governed by both hospitality and Vastu.
Wada culture strictly delineates host and guest seating zones.
Tamil Koodam architecture inherently creates guest zones in the NW and E through spatial design.
Telugu tradition's strong hospitality culture carefully balances guest honor with host authority.
Jain non-attachment philosophy reinforces the NW (Vayu/transient) placement for guests.
Kerala Tharavad guest zones are architecturally defined — the Kizhakke-kettu serves as the default guest reception area.
Haveli Osari architecture naturally creates distinct host and guest zones through furniture placement.
Bengali tradition balances elaborate Atithi-sebha with firm spatial hierarchy.
Kalinga hospitality assigns directional zones based on the guest's relationship to the household.
Sikh tradition distinguishes between Langar (egalitarian communal) and domestic (hierarchical) seating — Vastu applies to the latter.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Use L-shaped or U-shaped sofa configurations where the host's end is in the SW and guest seating extends toward NW or E.
Modern VastuArrange living room seating so that guest-facing chairs or sofa sections are in the NW or East, naturally directing visitors to these positions
Place a small side table or decorative element in the SW to subtly discourage guests from occupying the host's corner
Use a sofa configuration where the long side runs NW to SE — guests naturally sit on the NW end while the host occupies the SW end
Remedies from other traditions
Place a Vastu Yantra at the affected zone per Brihat Samhita prescription
Vedic VastuVedic Agni Hotra at the transition point to purify and harmonize spatial energy
Apply Hemadpanthi spatial correction principles for guest seating direction
HemadpanthiTulsi Vrindavan placement to purify the affected zone
Classical Sources
“The Atithi (guest) shall be seated in the Vayuvya (NW) quadrant — the quarter of movement and passage. As Vayu carries fragrance from flower to flower, the Vayuvya seat honors the Atithi's transient presence without granting permanent authority.”
“In the Mandapa (hall), the visitor takes a seat in the Purva (East) or Vayuvya (NW) — these are the Atithi-sthanas (guest places). The Nairutya is reserved for the Griha-pati alone; the guest who sits there assumes the master's authority.”
“The guest who arrives at the dwelling is offered the seat in the Purva or Vayavya direction. The Purva seat honors with Indra's welcome; the Vayavya seat suits Vayu's principle of movement — the guest comes and goes with ease.”
“Vishvakarma taught that the Atithi-asana (guest seat) in the Purva or Vayavya ensures harmonious social interaction. The guest faces the host in the Nairutya — their gazes meet across the room, creating a balanced conversational dynamic.”

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