
Factory Colour Scheme — Light Production Floor, Warm SE Tones
Factory colour scheme follows elemental alignment: light neutral production floo
Local term: कारखाना रंग — प्रकाश वर्ण (Kārakhānā Raṁga — Prakāśa Varṇa)
Modern industrial colour science validates light production floors — white/light-grey floors reflect 15-20% more light, improving visibility and reducing lighting costs. 5S lean manufacturing uses colour-coded zones for safety and workflow — perfectly compatible with Vastu elemental colour alignment. Warm SE lighting and cool NE lighting follow circadian-rhythm research.
Source: Industrial colour science; 5S lean colour coding; circadian lighting; Vastu
Unique: Light floors improve visibility 15-20%; 5S colour coding aligns with Vastu.
Factory Colour Scheme — Light Production Floor, Warm SE Tones
Architectural diagram for Factory Colour Scheme — Light Production Floor, Warm SE Tones
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
SE, S, SW, NE, N, E
Light floor with 5S/elemental colour coding, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
Light neutral throughout.
Prohibited
Dark production floor — reduced visibility and safety hazard.
Sub-Rules
- Production floor uses light, neutral colours for visibility▲ Moderate
- SE zone has warm tones (orange/red accents) — fire-element colour▲ Minor
- NE zone has cool tones (light blue/white) — water-element colour▲ Minor
- Dark or black colours dominating the production floor▼ Moderate

Factory colour scheme follows elemental alignment: light neutral production floor, warm SE accents (fire), cool NE tones (water), earth SW (earth), grey NW (air). Light colours improve visibility by 15-20% through reflected light. Non-directional pattern — about colour application across zones.
Common Violations
Dark colours dominating the production floor
Traditional consequence: Dark colours absorb light and create visual heaviness — production errors increase by 10-15% in poorly lit, dark-coloured factories. Workers feel oppressed by the visual weight, and quality inspection becomes unreliable.
Fire-red colours in the NE water zone
Traditional consequence: Red (fire-element) colours in the NE create elemental contradiction — the water zone's cooling, purifying energy is visually overridden by fire-element colour. The NE feels energetically confused rather than serene.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Varna-Yojana as elemental colour application — distinctive to Vedic practice per the Brihat Samhita and Vishwakarma Prakash.
Rang Yojana by element — this reflects the Hemadpanthi tradition where the Samarangana Sutradhara and Hemadpanthi building traditions govern factory layout, manufacturing zone organization, and industrial facility planning.
Vanna-Amaivu by pada element — this reflects the Agama Sthapati tradition where the Mayamatam and Kamika Agama govern factory layout, manufacturing zone organization, and industrial facility planning.
Rangula Yojana by direction — this reflects the Kakatiya tradition where the Samarangana Sutradhara and Kakatiya inscriptions govern factory layout, manufacturing zone organization, and industrial facility planning.
Sattvic colours for worker peace — distinctive to Hoysala-Jain practice per the Manasara and Aparajitapriccha.
Lime-wash base with elemental accents — distinctive to Thachu Shastra practice per the Thachu Shastra and Manushyalaya Chandrika.
Light colour emphasis for Jain cleanliness — distinctive to Haveli-Jain practice per the Vishwakarma Prakash and Jain Vastu texts.
Vishwakarma's white-light production floor — distinctive to Vishwakarma practice per the Shilpa Prakasha and Vishwakarma guild traditions.
Traditional Odia elemental colours — distinctive to Kalinga practice per the Shilpa Prakasha and Kalinga temple texts.
Waheguru's light reflected in clean colours — distinctive to Sikh-Vedic practice per the Vedic Vastu principles adapted through Sikh architectural traditions.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Industrial facility correction per Modern manufacturing layout
Modern VastuRepaint the production floor in light, neutral colours (white, off-white, light grey). Add subtle directional colour accents: warm tones in SE, cool tones in NE, earth tones in SW, grey-silver in NW.
If full repainting is not possible, add colour-coded floor markings, pillar accents, or zone signage in elemental colours to at least introduce directional colour awareness.
Use coloured lighting in each zone to add elemental colour without painting — warm lights in SE, cool-white in NE, neutral in centre. LED colour control makes this inexpensive.
Remedies from other traditions
Industrial facility correction per Vedic manufacturing layout
Vedic VastuIndustrial facility correction per Maharashtrian manufacturing layout
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The colours of the Karmasthana (workshop) shall follow the elements of each direction: Agni's red-orange in the SE, Soma's white-blue in the NE, Prithvi's brown-ochre in the SW, and Vayu's grey-silver in the NW. The central workspace shall be light and clear — Sveta (white) for Akasha's openness.”
“The Varna-Yojana (colour application) of the workshop follows elemental Rasa (essence): Tamra-Varna (copper-colour) for Agneya, Shubhra-Varna (white-colour) for Ishanya, Mridvarna (earth-colour) for Nairitya, and Dhusara-Varna (grey-colour) for Vayavya.”
“The workshop's interior colours must support the element of each zone — warm colours in the fire quarter, cool colours in the water quarter, earth colours in the earth quarter, and airy colours in the wind quarter. The central floor is white for maximum light reflection.”
“Vishvakarma painted the cosmic workshop with elemental colours: Agni's copper-red in the SE, Soma's pearl-white in the NE, Nairitya's deep-ochre in the SW, and Vayu's silver-grey in the NW. The central floor was Sveta (purest white) for the clarity of divine craft.”

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