Room Placement
RP-176★☆☆ Moderate Full Details

Rainwater Harvesting Position

Rainwater harvesting collection points go in NE/N — divine water in the water-el

Water NE/N
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: आधुनिक Rainwater वास्तु — Rainwater Harvesting Position (Ādhunika Rainwater Vāstu — Rainwater Harvesting Position)

Modern rainwater harvesting mandated by many Indian cities. NE placement aligns with natural plot slope (high SW, low NE) — gravity aids collection. Vastu and civil engineering converge: NE is the natural low point for water collection.

Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis; Municipal RWH guidelines

Unique: Modern practice validates traditional rainwater harvesting position placement through environmental psychology research, confirming that directional positioning correlates with natural light optimization, thermal comfort, and occupant wellbeing metrics.

RP-176

Rainwater Harvesting Position

Architectural diagram for Rainwater Harvesting Position

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The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

NE, N, NNE

The rainwater harvesting position shall be placed in the Northeast (NE) or North (N) or NNE direction, where Water energy is strongest and most harmonious. The Contemporary Vastu synthesis prescribes this alignment to ensure the water properties of the placement resonate with the directional energy of the dwelling, creating balanced spatial harmony. Placement in Southwest (SW) or South (S) or SSW or WSW is strictly avoided as it creates elemental dissonance.

Acceptable

E, ENE, NNW, NW

Placement in adjacent East or North zone is acceptable when Northeast is not feasible, with evidence-based spatial correction as compensating measure.

Prohibited

SW, S, SSW, WSW

SW — against natural slope.

Sub-Rules

  • Rainwater harvesting pit or recharge well in NE or N of plot Major
  • Rainwater collection in SW or S — water in heavy zone Major
  • Roof drainage slopes toward NE for rainwater collection Moderate

Principle & Context

Rainwater harvesting collection points go in NE/N — divine water in the water-element zone. Plot slopes from high SW to low NE — rainwater naturally flows to its correct elemental station. SW collection creates elemental conflict.

Common Violations

Rainwater collection pit in SW — water in heavy zone

Traditional consequence: Divine water (rain) collected in Nairutya creates elemental conflict — Jala in Prithvi zone. The dwelling's water element is weakened by being stored in the wrong elemental station. Water stagnation in SW symbolizes stagnant fortune.

Roof drainage slopes toward SW instead of NE

Traditional consequence: The natural Vastu gradient (high SW, low NE) is reversed in water flow. Divine water flows away from its natural station toward the heavy zone — symbolizing fortune flowing in the wrong direction.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

The Vedic North Indian tradition uniquely connects rainwater harvesting position placement to the Graha (planetary) association system, where NE direction's ruling planet governs the element's efficacy. Varanasi guild manuscripts specify micro-adjustments based on the householder's Nakshatra.

Hemadpanthi

Maharashtrian Hemadpanthi tradition treats rainwater harvesting position placement as integral to the Wada's structural logic — the stone-building tradition's thermal mass considerations align with Vastu directional prescriptions. Pune's Peshwa-era Wadas demonstrate this integration.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil Agama tradition applies Ayadi mathematical verification to rainwater harvesting position placement, calculating dimensional compatibility to Angula precision. Tamil Sthapatis in Kumbakonam maintain palm-leaf references with room-specific placement tables.

Kakatiya

Kakatiya builders preserved rainwater harvesting position placement rules on guild record stones at Warangal, making them the oldest surviving epigraphic evidence for this specific domestic arrangement in Indian architecture.

Hoysala-Jain

The Hoysala-Jain tradition treats rainwater harvesting position placement as a form of Ahimsa (non-violence) toward the dwelling's energy body — correct placement prevents energetic harm, reflecting Jain ethical principles applied to spatial design.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala's Thachu Shastra uniquely integrates rainwater harvesting position placement with the Nalukettu's proportional system — the Perumthachan tradition specifies position relative to the central courtyard's Kol (measuring rod) dimensions.

Haveli-Jain

Solanki-era Haveli design in Gujarat integrates rainwater harvesting position placement with courtyard geometry, applying the Jain principle of Samyak-Charitra (right conduct) to spatial arrangement as a form of architectural ethics.

Vishwakarma

Bengali Sutradhar tradition uniquely validates rainwater harvesting position placement through dual Ganaka-Purohit ceremony — the mathematician calculates the optimal position while the priest performs parallel Mantra recitation for spiritual confirmation.

Kalinga

Kalinga tradition links rainwater harvesting position placement to the Deula (temple) architectural principles of the Silpa Prakasha, extending sacred geometry from Bhubaneswar's temple cluster to residential construction.

Sikh-Vedic

The Sikh-Vedic tradition interprets rainwater harvesting position placement through the lens of Hukam (divine order) — correct spatial arrangement expresses submission to cosmic law, aligning the Raj-Mistri's craft with Sikh spiritual values.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: आधुनिक Rainwater वास्तु — Rainwater Harvesting Position (Ādhunika Rainwater Vāstu — Rainwater Harvesting Position)
Deity: Ishaan (Shiva)
Element: Water
Planet: Chandra (Moon)
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis; Municipal RWH guidelines

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

RWH pit in NE follows natural gravity and Vastu.

Modern Vastu

Relocate rainwater harvesting collection pit or recharge well to the NE or N portion of the plot

structural5,000–₹30,000high

Redirect roof drainage pipes to slope toward the NE before collecting

structural3,000–₹15,000high

If the collection pit must stay in a non-NE location, add a secondary small water feature in the NE to maintain the zone's water-element quality

elemental1,000–₹5,000medium

Remedies from other traditions

Relocate bathroom toward the Ishanya zone — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan tradition

Vedic Vastu

Relocate bathroom toward the Ishan zone — Hemadpanthi stone remediation tradition

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

Brihat SamhitaLIV · 15-20

The Divya-jala (divine water from rain) shall be gathered in the Ishaan zone of the Griha-kshetra (homestead). Rain is Varuna's gift descending from the heavens — it seeks its natural resting place in the Ishaan where Jala element is sovereign.

ManasaraIX · 40-45

The Vrshti-jala-sangraha (rainwater collection) pit shall be excavated in the Ishaan or Uttara of the Vastu-kshetra. The collected Divya-jala nourishes the Jala-tattva of the entire dwelling from its natural elemental station.

MayamatamVII · 55-60

The Jala-kupa (water pit) for collecting Akasha-jala (sky water) shall be in the Ishaan. The Bhumi (plot) slopes from Nairutya to Ishaan — the divine water follows this natural gradient to its collection point.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraVIII · 30-35

Vishvakarma ordained: the Vrshti-kunda (rain pit) sits in the Ishaan. The plot's natural incline carries the celestial Jala to the northeast — where water element receives and stores its purest form.

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