
Rectangular Proportions — 1:1.5
Rectangular plot with 1:1.5 ratio is auspicious — balanced elongation
Local term: Rectangular plot, 40×60 plot, 30×45 site, 1:1.5 proportion
The 1:1.5 rectangular plot is the most practical and widely available Vastu-compliant form. Modern advisors recommend it as the best balance between Vastu compliance and real estate practicality. The N-S longer axis is universally preferred. Width-to-length ratios between 1:1.25 and 1:1.5 are all considered excellent.
Unique: Modern practice has made 1:1.5 the single most common Vastu-compliant plot form — more common in practice than the theoretically superior square, because housing boards and development authorities standardized on this proportion.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
A rectangular plot with a 1:1.5 ratio (e.g., 40×60 feet) is considered the most auspicious rectangular proportion. The longer side should ideally run North-South, aligning the building along the earth's magnetic axis. This ratio mirrors the proportions found in many classical temple plans.
Acceptable
all
1:1.25 to 1:1.5 ratios are equally beneficial. East-West elongation is acceptable if the plot has a wider north or east frontage.
Prohibited
Ratios exceeding 1:2 thin the energy excessively. Plots narrower than 1:2.5 are considered 'naga-shaped' (serpentine) and create severe Vastu defects.
Sub-Rules
- Rectangular plot with ratio between 1:1.25 and 1:1.5▲ Major
- Longer axis runs North-South▲ Moderate
- Plot ratio exceeds 1:2▼ Major
- East-West elongation with narrow north frontage▼ Moderate

The 1:1.5 rectangular plot is the second-most auspicious shape after a perfect square. Its proportions ensure balanced energy distribution while providing practical space for proper room placement — the golden ratio of Vastu.
Common Violations
Rectangular plot with ratio exceeding 1:2
Traditional consequence: Energy thins along the longer axis — scattered focus, divided family, financial leakage
Longer axis runs E-W with narrow N frontage
Traditional consequence: Kubera (north) energy is compressed — prosperity enters through a bottleneck
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The 40×60 feet plot is a North Indian cultural standard — Delhi DDA, UP Housing Board, and Rajasthan UIT all use this proportion for residential allocations. It is the de facto Vastu module of North Indian town planning.
Maharashtrian Wada architecture naturally optimizes the 1:1.5 plot — the deep N-S axis accommodates the Osari-Chowk-Osari sequence (veranda-courtyard-veranda) that defines the Wada plan.
The 30×45 ground is a cultural institution in Tamil Nadu — CMDA (Chennai) and DTCP layouts consistently offer this proportion. Tamil tradition uniquely requires Ayadi verification of the exact footage, not just the ratio.
Telugu tradition distinguishes between Devara Sthalam (temple plot, always square) and Gruha Sthalam (house plot, ideally 1:1.5 rectangle) — the two sacred geometries serve different purposes.
BDA's 30×40 plot (1:1.33) and 30×50 plot (1:1.67) bracket the ideal 1:1.5 — both are considered acceptable in practice. Karnataka tradition is pragmatically flexible within this range.
Kerala's Thalavara system personalizes the plot dimensions to the owner's body — the ideal 1:1.5 plot for one person may have different absolute dimensions than for another, though the ratio remains constant.
Ahmedabad's Pol architecture is a living example of 1:1.5 plots at urban scale — entire neighborhoods of Jain merchants built on standardized rectangular plots with shared walls, creating highly efficient Vastu-compliant urban form.
Bengali tradition documents the Rajbari (aristocratic mansion) proportion of 1:1.5 as a cultural ideal — Calcutta's heritage mansions provide a built archive of this Vastu proportion in practice.
Kalinga tradition uniquely derives the 1:1.5 domestic proportion from the Jagamohana (temple assembly hall) plan module — connecting household geometry to temple geometry through a shared proportional system.
Punjab and Haryana development authorities (PUDA, HUDA) standardized residential plots at 1:1.5 proportions — making this the most widely available Vastu-compliant plot form in the region.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Ensure wider side faces north or east. If E-W elongated, increase north setback. Place heavy elements (boulders, planters) at SW corner to anchor the rectangle.
Modern VastuFor plots slightly exceeding 1:1.5 ratio, use internal garden walls to visually subdivide into near-square zones
Place heavy elements (boulders, planters) at the SW corner to anchor the elongated rectangle
Ensure wider side faces north or east when constructing the boundary wall
For E-W elongated plots, widen the north entrance with a generous setback to allow more Kubera energy
Remedies from other traditions
For E-W elongated plots, widen the north entrance and increase the north setback to allow greater Kubera (prosperity) energy entry.
Vedic VastuGanesh Atharvashirsha recitation, Tulsi Vrindavan placement — applied to plot and site context per Maharashtrian Hemadpanthi tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“A site whose breadth is three-quarters of its length is deemed ayata (rectangular) and most auspicious after the square.”
“Rectangular sites where length exceeds breadth by half bring prosperity. The longer axis shall face Kubera (north) and Yama (south).”
“Of rectangular plots, those whose proportion is as the face of a cow — three parts wide and four parts tall — are praiseworthy.”
“The Ayata-kshetra (rectangular plot) with the longer dimension along Uttara-Dakshina (North-South) is praiseworthy. The ratio of width to length shall not exceed two-thirds — Dvitiya Bhaga. Beyond this, the energy becomes thin and attenuated along the longer axis.”
“Among rectangular sites, the Suvarna Anupata (golden proportion) of 1 to 1.5 is most auspicious. This proportion echoes the sacred ratio found in temple Garbhagriha design and in the proportions of the human body as described by the Shilpis.”

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