
The Fire Exit Window
Every dwelling needs an emergency egress window or secondary exit on the opposit
Local term: फायर एग्ज़िट विंडो — आपातकालीन खिड़की / आग बचाव खिड़की (Phāyar Egziṭ Viṇḍo — Āpātkālīn Khiḍkī / Āg Bachāv Khiḍkī)
Modern Vastu and building codes both require emergency egress from residential units — the National Building Code of India mandates alternate exits for multi-unit buildings. For individual homes, the principle translates to ensuring at least one openable window or secondary door on the opposite face from the main entrance. Window grilles should have at least one openable section for fire rescue access. Cross-ventilation windows naturally serve the dual-exit function.
Source: Contemporary Vastu + National Building Code of India fire safety
Unique: NBC fire safety code — openable window grilles for fire rescue access.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
Emergency egress window opposite main entrance with openable grille, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.
Acceptable
all
Openable window on at least two faces for cross-ventilation and escape.
Prohibited
all
A dwelling where all openings (doors and windows) are concentrated on one face or one direction creates Eka-Marga Griha (single-path dwelling) — a critical safety flaw where a single fire or obstruction blocks all egress routes simultaneously. Windows with permanent grilles that cannot be opened from inside, in the absence of any other exit path, trap occupants during emergencies. The ancient concept of Bandha-Griha (trapped dwelling) recognizes that a house with no alternate exit path becomes a prison during crisis. The contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions reinforce this prohibition across all directions.
Sub-Rules
- Emergency egress window or secondary exit exists opposite the main door▲ Minor
- Emergency window is large enough for a person to pass through and opens from inside without keys▲ Minor
- All openings concentrated on one face with no alternate exit path▼ Moderate
- Windows have permanent grilles with no openable section for emergency escape▼ Minor

Every dwelling needs an emergency egress window or secondary exit on the opposite side from the main door — the Vipaksha Niskramana principle. This ensures that fire or obstruction at the main entrance does not trap occupants. A dwelling with all openings on one face is a Bandha-Griha (trapped dwelling). The emergency window also supports Vayu-Pravaaha (cross-ventilation) during normal use.
Common Violations
All openings concentrated on one face with no alternate exit
Traditional consequence: Bandha-Griha (trapped dwelling) — the house becomes a cage when the single exit path is blocked. This is the most ancient safety concern in dwelling design — the inability to escape fire or structural collapse through an alternate route. The Eka-Marga (single-path) layout creates existential risk for the occupants.
Fixed window grilles with no openable section eliminating emergency escape
Traditional consequence: Kapāṭa-Hīna Jāla (lattice without gate) — the grille provides security but eliminates the emergency function of the window. In fire, the grille becomes a cage barrier. The window serves its Vayu (ventilation) function but fails its Apat-Niskramana (emergency escape) function entirely.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Haveli courtyard — inherent multi-directional exit through central open space.
Wada Chowk — courtyard as emergency assembly and escape hub.
Tamil Munn/Pinn Vasal — front and rear door as standard — a distinctive feature of Agama Sthapati architectural practice as documented in the Mayamatam and Kamika Agama.
Kakatiya courtyard plan — inherent multi-exit capability — a distinctive feature of Kakatiya architectural practice as documented in the Samarangana Sutradhara and Kakatiya inscriptions.
Jain Jīva-Raksha — life protection as architectural mandate.
Nalukettu Naḍumuttam — courtyard as universal escape hub — a distinctive feature of Thachu Shastra architectural practice as documented in the Thachu Shastra and Manushyalaya Chandrika.
Haveli dual access — separate shop exit and family rear exit.
Bengali narrow-plot risk — rear window as critical single alternate exit.
Kalinga cyclone egress — multi-wall openings for storm and fire escape.
Punjab Vihṛā — courtyard providing inherent dual-exit capability.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuInstall an openable emergency window on the wall opposite the main entrance, large enough for a person to pass through
Replace fixed window grilles with collapsible or openable grilles that can be unlocked from inside during emergencies
Add a secondary exit door or window on a different wall if all current openings are on one face
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 Sthapati shall ensure that every Griha has Dvitiya Niskramana Marga (secondary exit path) — a window or secondary opening on the wall opposite the Mukha Dvara (main door). If Agni (fire) blocks the Mukha Dvara, the Grihapati and his family must have a Vipaksha Gavaksha (opposite-side window) through which they can escape. A dwelling with only one exit path is a Bandha-Griha (trapped dwelling).”
“The wise Sthapati provides for the unforeseen — every dwelling must have an opening on the face opposite the Mukha Dvara through which the occupants can be rescued or can escape if the Dvara path is obstructed. This Vipaksha Dvara (opposite opening) is the Griha's Apat-Kala Marga (emergency-time path) — unused in daily life but essential in crisis.”
“The Griha that has openings only on its Mukha (face) is like a cave with one mouth — if the mouth is sealed, there is no escape. The Sthapati provides at least one Gavaksha on the Prishtha (rear) face large enough for Niskramana (exit) — this is the Apat Gavaksha (emergency window) that serves its purpose only in the hour of Vipatti (calamity).”
“Vishvakarma ordained that no dwelling shall have a single exit path — the Mukha Dvara is the daily entrance and exit, but the Prishtha Gavaksha (rear window) is the Apat Marga (emergency route). The Griha must breathe from two sides at minimum — this dual-opening serves Vayu-Pravaaha (cross-ventilation) in peace and Apat-Niskramana (emergency escape) in crisis.”

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