
General Ward Orientation
General wards face North or East to receive the two most healing cosmic forces:
Local term: जनरल वॉर्ड / नॉर्थ-ईस्ट (Janral Vŏrḍ / Nŏrth-Īsṭ)
Modern hospital design strongly supports N/E ward orientation. Evidence-based design research validates the therapeutic benefits of morning light and consistent northern illumination. Contemporary evidence-based healthcare design research and WHO hospital design guidelines corroborate this traditional spatial prescription through measurable patient outcome data.
Source: Evidence-based healthcare design; WHO hospital design guidelines
Unique: Modern N/E-facing wards incorporate large windows, light shelves for deeper light penetration, and operable windows for natural ventilation — combining ancient orientation with modern technology.
General Ward Orientation
Architectural diagram for General Ward Orientation

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, E
Modern Vastu consensus places the general ward orientation in the North or East zone, synthesizing traditional directional wisdom with contemporary evidence-based healthcare design for optimal patient outcomes.
Acceptable
NE, NNE, ENE, NW
NE or NW-facing wards are acceptable alternatives.
Prohibited
SW, S, SSW
S or SW-facing wards expose patients to harsh afternoon heat and death-direction energy.
Sub-Rules
- General ward faces N or E with windows receiving morning light and fresh air▲ Major
- Ward faces NE or NW with good cross-ventilation▲ Moderate
- Ward faces W with harsh afternoon sun exposure▼ Moderate
- Ward faces S or SW — patients face death-direction energy▼ Major

Principle & Context

General wards face North or East to receive the two most healing cosmic forces: Vayu (north — fresh air, prana-breath) and Surya (east — morning vitality, light). This orientation ensures patients are bathed in nature's most restorative energies, accelerating recovery and enhancing well-being.
Common Violations
General wards facing South or Southwest
Traditional consequence: Patients are exposed to Yama's death energy and Nirriti's dissolution force. Recovery is slowed, complications increase, and the harsh afternoon heat from the west adds thermal stress to already weakened bodies.
Wards with no windows or sealed from natural light and air
Traditional consequence: The ward is cut off from both Surya's vitality and Vayu's life-breath. Without prana inflow from N/E, the healing environment becomes stagnant — recovery times extend significantly.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
North Indian hospitals place acute care wards facing East and chronic care wards facing North — matching the energy quality to the condition type.
Maharashtrian wards include cross-ventilation from N to S — fresh Vayu enters from the north and stale air exits through southern vents.
Tamil wards include a Thinnai (sheltered veranda) on the E side for patients to sit in morning sun — extending the ward's healing zone.
Telugu wards include wide windows on the E wall — maximizing sunrise exposure for patients.
Jain hospital wards maximize natural light and air flow — reflecting the principle of living in harmony with nature.
Kerala wards include a covered Pournamukham (front gallery) on the E side for patients to receive morning sun while sheltered from rain.
Gujarati wards use Jali (stone lattice screens) on E/N windows — filtering sunlight and air while maintaining prana flow.
Bengali wards use the Hawa Dwar system — continuous air channels from N through the ward for fresh prana circulation.
Coastal Kalinga hospitals orient wards to receive the morning sea breeze from the Bay of Bengal — considered especially healing prana.
Sikh tradition ensures equal N/E exposure for all patients — no hierarchy in bed placement relative to natural light and air.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
N/E wards with light shelves and operable windows — modern standard
Modern VastuReorient ward rooms to face North or East by redesigning window placement and room layout
Add north-facing or east-facing windows to existing wards that currently face other directions
Install full-spectrum daylight lamps simulating morning sunlight in S/W-facing wards
Use mirrors to redirect northern light into south-facing wards and improve cross-ventilation
Remedies from other traditions
N/E-facing wards with morning sun exposure — North Indian standard
Vedic VastuN-S cross-ventilation in wards — Maharashtrian tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The chambers of the sick shall open towards the north and east, that the breath of Vayu and the light of Surya may enter freely. Patients who lie facing these directions recover swiftly, for the prana-vayu flows unimpeded into their bodies.”
“The wards of the chikitsalaya orient their openings to Uttara and Purva, receiving the morning prana of Surya and the cool breath of Kubera. The sick who rest in rooms opening to these quarters find their ailments diminished by the cosmic healing forces.”
“Patient halls open their windows to the north and east. The north wind carries purity and the east light carries vitality — together they create the atmosphere essential for the body's return to balance.”
“Vishvakarma instructs: the sick rooms of the healing house must face north or east. From these directions, Vayu (life-breath) and Surya (vital energy) enter the patient's chamber and accelerate the restoration of health.”

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