
Hedgerow Placement
Dense hedgerows on South and West boundaries reinforce the heavy protective zone
Local term: Hedgerow placement, boundary landscaping, green buffer zone
Modern Vastu supports dense S/W hedgerows. Environmental science rationale: S/W hedgerows block afternoon solar radiation (reducing cooling costs by 10-20%), filter hot winds, reduce noise from busy S/W roads, and provide habitat for birds and pollinators. Keeping NE clear allows maximum morning sunlight — scientifically validated health benefits.
Source: Contemporary Vastu; landscape architecture; environmental science
Unique: Environmental science confirms S/W hedgerow benefits — thermal buffering, noise reduction, and biodiversity support.
Hedgerow Placement
Architectural diagram for Hedgerow Placement
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
S, W, SW
Dense native hedgerows on S/W; low flowering plants on N/E, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
SSW, WSW, SSE, WNW
Medium-height hedge on S/W.
Prohibited
NE, N, E
Dense vegetation blocking NE morning sunlight.
Sub-Rules
- Dense hedgerows on South and West boundaries▲ Moderate
- Dense hedgerow blocking the NE corner▼ Major
- Flowering hedge with Prana-generating plants▲ Moderate

Dense hedgerows on South and West boundaries reinforce the heavy protective zones. NE, N, and E must remain clear of dense growth to allow beneficial energy inflow. Living hedges generate Prana while providing natural barriers.
Common Violations
Dense hedgerow blocking the NE corner
Traditional consequence: The most auspicious direction is blocked by a living wall — Ishaan's spiritual energy, morning sunlight, and wealth flow are all curtailed. A dense NE hedge is like putting a curtain before a temple sanctum.
No vegetation on S/W boundaries
Traditional consequence: The heavy directions lack nature's reinforcement — harsh afternoon heat, hot winds, and Yama's energy enter unfiltered. The S/W boundary is energetically exposed without its natural shield.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic Gulma-Panti concept — systematic shrub rows as directional energy modulators.
Hemadpanthi combination of masonry and living hedge on S/W — double reinforcement.
Tamil Kalli hedge tradition — Euphorbia as sacred protective boundary plant.
Kakatiya proportional hedge — height scaled to compound wall.
Jain Ahimsa hedge principle — non-toxic, non-harmful species only.
Kerala monsoon climate adds urgency to Padinjaru hedgerow — monsoon wind buffer.
Gujarat's arid climate — S/W hedgerow critical for heat protection.
Bengali protective plant tradition — sacred species (Akanda, Dhutura) on S/W for protective symbolism.
Kalinga coastal climate — western hedgerow serves as cyclone wind buffer.
Sikh Seva principle — well-maintained hedges serve household and neighbourhood.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Modern: Plant native, drought-resistant species for low-maintenance S/W hedgerows — combining Vastu with water conservation.
Modern VastuRemove or drastically trim dense NE hedgerows — replace with low flowering ground cover (marigold, petunia)
Plant dense, fast-growing hedge species on S/W boundaries — Ixora, Duranta, or Bougainvillea
If S/W hedge is not possible, use large potted dense shrubs along the S/W compound wall — portable green buffer
Remedies from other traditions
Plant Durva grass (sacred grass) at the NE corner to mark it as open while still having greenery.
Vedic VastuGarden element placement correction toward Dakshin — Maharashtrian landscaping
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“Dense trees and thick vegetation shall guard the Dakshin and Pashchim boundaries — where Yama's heat and Varuna's storms threaten, let nature's shield be strongest. The Ishaan (NE) must remain open and light-filled.”
“Plant dense Gulma-Panti (shrub rows) along the Dakshin and Pashchim Prakara. These living walls reinforce the Prithvi Tattva of the heavy directions. The Uttara and Purva boundaries must host only low flowering plants.”
“The southern and western boundaries shall be guarded by dense vegetation — a living fortress against harsh elements. The northeastern boundary shall be open, clean, and unblocked by dense growth.”
“Vishvakarma instructs: thick hedgerows on the Dakshin and Pashchim sides — nature's own compound wall. On the Ishaan and Purva, only low flowers that welcome the dawn. Dense growth in the NE is a curtain before the sacred.”

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