
The Revolving Door
Revolving doors are acceptable for commercial buildings (hotels, offices, malls)
Local term: रिवॉल्विंग डोर (Revolving Door)
Modern Vastu accepts revolving doors as standard commercial infrastructure — hotels, malls, corporate offices, IT parks. The critical rule is: never residential. In commercial settings, pad alignment of the center axis and a side-panel hinged door alternative are recommended. The revolving door's air-barrier function (climate control) is acknowledged as a practical benefit.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice; modern commercial architecture
Unique: Modern practice acknowledges the revolving door's air-barrier function as a practical benefit that partially offsets its energetic ambiguity in commercial contexts.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
Commercial only. Pada-aligned center axis. Side-panel hinged door alternative, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.
Acceptable
all
Commercial revolving door with standard pada compliance.
Prohibited
all
Revolving door at any residential entrance — creates perpetual Vayu Chakra at the dwelling threshold.
Sub-Rules
- Revolving door used in commercial/office building only▲ Moderate
- Revolving door used at a residential entrance▼ Major
- Side-panel hinged door available as alternative entry▲ Moderate
- Revolving door center axis aligned with pada grid▲ Minor

Principle & Context

Revolving doors are acceptable for commercial buildings (hotels, offices, malls) but prohibited for residential use. The revolving door's continuous circular motion creates a perpetual Vayu Chakra (air vortex) — appropriate for the cyclical flow of commerce but antithetical to the domestic need for a definitive open-close threshold boundary. A home's entrance must fully open to welcome and fully close to protect; a revolving door does neither completely.
Common Violations
Revolving door at a residential home entrance
Traditional consequence: Perpetual Vayu Chakra (air vortex) at the dwelling threshold — the home's energy boundary is never fully sealed. Prana flows in and out continuously without the definitive threshold-crossing that anchors the householder's energy within. Domestic instability, restlessness, and a feeling of never truly being 'home' are the traditional consequences.
Revolving door as the only entrance (no hinged alternative)
Traditional consequence: No traditional Dwara crossing available — every entry and exit is a rotational passage rather than a threshold crossing. The absence of a definitive open-close boundary weakens the building's energetic containment, even in commercial settings.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition distinguishes Nagara Dwara (market gate) from Griha Dwara (house door) — different rules for different functions.
The Wada tradition's emphasis on the grand threshold is fundamentally incompatible with revolving doors in residential contexts.
Tamil tradition notes that the revolving door's circular geometry doesn't conform to the rectangular Ayadi Shadvarga verification — a mathematical limitation.
Kakatiya tradition's functional gateway design — different gate types for different purposes — supports the commercial-only revolving door approach.
Jain philosophy's emphasis on clear states — a door should be definitively one thing or another — reinforces the prohibition on residential revolving doors.
Kerala's Poomukham architecture is fundamentally incompatible with revolving doors — the verandah-based entrance requires a different spatial approach.
The Haveli Darwajo is a family identity marker — a revolving door cannot serve this cultural-spiritual function.
Bengali tradition finds the Darshan Duar concept partially compatible with revolving doors — the directionality of approach is maintained even through rotation.
Even Jagannath Temple's massive Singha Dwara uses a definitive open-close mechanism — no rotating gates even at monumental scale.
The Golden Temple achieves universal access with four hinged entrances — demonstrating that openness doesn't require a revolving mechanism.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuFor commercial buildings: add a standard hinged door as an alternative entrance beside the revolving door — provides a traditional threshold crossing option
For residential (if removal is not possible): keep the revolving door locked/disabled and use only the side hinged door for daily entry/exit
Place a raised threshold strip at the outer edge of the revolving door's sweep radius — creates an energy boundary even though the door itself doesn't fully close
Remedies from other traditions
Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The Dwara of the Griha must have a clear threshold — a definitive boundary the householder crosses when entering and leaving. An entrance that is neither open nor closed confuses the Prana flow, for the Vayu cannot determine whether it is invited in or kept out.”
“The Dwara of the marketplace and the Dwara of the dwelling follow different Dharma. The market entrance may admit many simultaneously, rotating like a wheel of commerce. The dwelling entrance must open and close for the householder alone — a personal threshold, not a public turnstile.”
“The Griha Dwara is a conscious boundary — it opens to welcome and closes to protect. An entrance mechanism that permits no closure provides no protection. The dwelling requires both welcome and refuge; a door that cannot fully close offers only the former.”
“Vishvakarma distinguishes the Nagara Dwara (city gate) from the Griha Dwara (house door). The Nagara gate may employ continuous passage mechanisms for volume — but the Griha Dwara must preserve the Pravishthi (entry) and Bahirgamana (exit) as distinct acts of crossing.”

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