
Seasonal Room Adjustments
The dwelling's room usage should follow the six Indian seasons. Summer activates
Local term: ऋतु-गृह-क्रम / मौसमी समायोजन (Ṛtu-Gṛha-Krama / Mausamī Samāyojana)
Modern seasonal adjustment combines traditional room-shifting with HVAC optimisation. The principle of NE-cool/SW-warm remains valid even with air conditioning — seasonal room use reduces energy consumption. Modern practices include programmable thermostat zoning aligned with directional variation, seasonal curtain changes, and smart-home light scheduling that increases NE lighting in winter.
Unique: HVAC integration — modern zoned climate control can amplify the traditional NE-cool/SW-warm principle, using less energy when rooms are used in alignment with their natural thermal character.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
Full seasonal room-shift plan leveraging directional thermal differences, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
all
Basic seasonal curtain and window adjustment.
Prohibited
all
Fixed year-round room usage ignoring seasonal directional advantages.
Sub-Rules
- Summer: NE water features activated, cooler N/NE rooms used for sleeping▲ Moderate
- Winter: SE heating activated, heavier N/E curtains, increased NE lighting▲ Moderate
- Monsoon: SW/S rooms as primary living spaces, NE drainage checked▲ Minor
- Fixed room usage year-round ignoring seasonal directional advantages▼ Moderate
- Sleeping in hot SW room in summer when cooler NE/N rooms are available▼ Moderate

The dwelling's room usage should follow the six Indian seasons. Summer activates NE water and N/NE rooms for cooling. Winter activates SE fire and S/SW rooms for warmth. Monsoon prioritises drainage and dry zones. Seasonal adjustment treats the dwelling as a responsive living system rather than a static box.
Common Violations
Year-round fixed room usage ignoring seasonal variation
Traditional consequence: The dwelling's directional advantages go unused — hot rooms in summer and cold rooms in winter cause physical discomfort that accumulates into health impacts. The dwelling becomes a static box rather than a responsive living space.
SW sleeping in peak summer when NE/N rooms are available
Traditional consequence: The SW room receives maximum afternoon heat — sleeping there in summer disrupts rest quality. The NE/N rooms, naturally cooler from morning-sun rather than afternoon-sun exposure, remain unused. Chronic sleep disruption follows.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Rooftop sleeping in summer — the building's crown (terrace/roof) becomes a sleeping zone in Grishma, using the NE terrace corner for maximum cooling.
Wada Chowk — the internal courtyard's water-feature (Tulsi Vrindavan with water basin) activated in summer for evaporative cooling, drained in monsoon.
Thinnai (raised verandah) seasonal use — summer outdoor sleeping on the NE-facing Thinnai, monsoon closure and shift to inner rooms.
Talavaram (cellar) summer use — below-ground rooms for afternoon coolness, representing a vertical seasonal shift complementing the directional horizontal shift.
Hoysala-style perforated window screens — directionally adjustable ventilation that naturally supports seasonal airflow management.
Nalukettu passive climate design — the central courtyard inherently adjusts seasonal airflow, making the building itself a seasonal response system.
Jaali screens for seasonal ventilation control — perforated stone screens that can be opened or supplemented with wet cloth in summer, or backed with heavy curtains in winter.
Six-Ritu recognition in Bengal — the full classical Ritu cycle is practically observable in Bengal, allowing the most granular seasonal room-adjustment pattern.
Monsoon flood-awareness — Odisha's cyclone and flood risk make monsoon seasonal adjustment critically important for dwelling safety, not just comfort.
Bukhari (wood stove) in center or SE — the Punjabi winter heating tradition naturally aligns with Vastu fire-quarter placement.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Seasonal room-use plan (behavioral). Summer NE water feature + lighter curtains (elemental). Winter SE heating + heavier N/E curtains (elemental). Smart lighting for NE winter compensation (modern).
Modern VastuCreate a seasonal room-use plan — identify which rooms serve as primary sleeping, living, and activity zones in summer, monsoon, and winter
Summer activation: place a water feature or bowl of water in NE, open N/E windows, shift sleeping to NE/N rooms, use lighter curtains on N/E windows
Winter activation: use heavier curtains on N/E windows, activate SE heating, add extra lamps in NE zone to compensate for shorter days, shift primary living to S/SW rooms
Remedies from other traditions
Ritual timing and placement correction per Vedic calendar tradition
Vedic VastuRitual timing and placement correction per Maharashtrian calendar tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“Varahamihira instructs that the wise householder shifts his dwelling-use with the Ritus. In Grishma (summer), he retreats to the Uttara-Purva (N-NE) chambers — cool, shaded, water-blessed. In Hemanta (winter), he moves to the Dakshina-Agneya (S-SE) chambers — warm, sun-blessed, fire-proximate.”
“The dwelling of the learned man has six moods — one for each Ritu. The rooms do not change but the occupant changes rooms. Grishma: cool the Ishanya with water. Varsha: dry the Nairitya with fire. Hemanta: warm the Agneya with hearth. This is Ritu-Griha-Krama — seasonal dwelling rhythm.”
“The Mayamatam prescribes seasonal adjustment of the dwelling: in summer, the householder shall open the Uttara and Purva windows and close the Dakshina and Paschima. In winter, the reverse — close Uttara and Purva, open Dakshina to receive the warmth of the southern sun.”
“Vishvakarma declares that the dwelling has an annual breathing cycle. In summer it exhales through the cool north; in winter it inhales through the warm south. The householder who follows this cycle lives in perpetual comfort within the same four walls.”
“Kautilya notes that the royal quarters shift seasonally — summer chambers face north with water channels, winter chambers face south with heated floors. The ordinary householder should follow the same principle within his dwelling's scale.”

Check Your Floor Plan