Room Placement
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Circular Plan Vastu Considerations

Circular floor plans are rare in domestic Vastu and pose challenges because the

Space All
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: Sector mapping, directional arc division, Mandala inscription, radial partitioning (Sector mapping, directional arc division, Mandala inscription, radial partitioning)

Circular domestic plans are rare but increasing in experimental contemporary architecture. Modern Vastu practice advises sector-mapping: divide the circle into 8 or 16 directional arcs and apply standard room-placement rules to each sector. A circular plan with a central courtyard and sector-zoned rooms can achieve Vastu compliance. A freeform circular open-plan cannot.

Unique: Modern computational tools make sector-mapping of circular plans easier — CAD software can inscribe the Vastu Purusha Mandala grid onto any geometry.

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

Square or rectangular plan with clear directional corners — the Vastu default. — Vastu Shastra is fundamentally structured around the Vastu Purusha Mandala — a rectilinear grid. The ideal dwelling is square or rectangular because directional allocation, room placement, and the 16 sub-directions map cleanly onto right-angled geometry.

Acceptable

Circular plan divided into 8 or 16 directional sectors with room placement following standard rules. Central courtyard.

Prohibited

Undivided circular open plan with no directional zoning.

Sub-Rules

  • Circular plan divided into directional sectors aligned to cardinal and inter-cardinal directions Major
  • Circular plan with no directional zoning — undifferentiated open curve Major
  • Central courtyard or atrium at the center of the circular plan Moderate
  • Corner rooms lost due to circular geometry making directional allocation ambiguous Moderate

Principle & Context

Circular floor plans are rare in domestic Vastu and pose challenges because the Vastu Purusha Mandala is rectilinear. A circular plan can achieve Vastu compliance if divided into directional sectors aligned to the compass. Without sector-mapping, the circle is Vastu-undefined.

Common Violations

Circular plan without directional zoning

Traditional consequence: The Vastu Purusha cannot orient — his limbs find no corners to extend to. The dwelling becomes directionless, and room placement follows convenience rather than elemental-directional logic. The NE-SW axis and the SE-NW axis lose definition.

Open-plan circular living with no partitions

Traditional consequence: A continuous, undivided circular space has no Vastu structure — energy flows without directional channeling. While spatially dramatic, it is Vastu-null — neither positive nor negative, simply undefined.

Rooms placed without regard to circular-sector direction mapping

Traditional consequence: Kitchen in the NE arc, bedroom in the SE arc, or bathroom in the SW arc — all become possible when the circle is not sector-mapped. The absence of angular markers makes directional violations more likely than in rectilinear plans.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Vedic tradition provides the theological framework — the circle is cosmic but the square is domestic.

Hemadpanthi

Maratha defensive architecture (bastions) uses circular form, but domestic architecture is always rectilinear.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil tradition provides the most systematic enumeration of site shapes — 32 forms documented.

Kakatiya

Kakatiya temple architecture occasionally uses circular mandapa — a rare built precedent for circular Vastu.

Hoysala-Jain

Hoysala stellate temples demonstrate the most sophisticated directional mapping onto non-rectilinear geometry.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala tradition most strongly discourages circular domestic architecture — Thachu Shastra has no circular-dwelling guidelines.

Haveli-Jain

Haveli Chowk-and-wings format inherently requires rectilinear geometry.

Vishwakarma

Colonial heritage provides Kolkata's only circular domestic precedents — these are treated as architectural anomalies.

Kalinga

Kalinga temple circularity — built precedent for Vastu-mapping onto curved forms.

Sikh-Vedic

Sacred circular architecture (Golden Temple elements) but domestic architecture is rectilinear.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: Sector mapping, directional arc division, Mandala inscription, radial partitioning (Sector mapping, directional arc division, Mandala inscription, radial partitioning)
Deity: Brahma (Center)
Element: Space

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Sector-map the circle

Modern Vastu

Mark 8 directions at the perimeter

Modern Vastu

Allocate rooms to sectors following standard Vastu rules

Modern Vastu

Central courtyard is highly recommended for circular plans

Modern Vastu

Inscribe the Vastu Purusha Mandala grid onto the circular plan — mark the 8 or 16 directional sectors and allocate rooms accordingly

behavioral0–₹5,000high

Install directional markers (compass rose floor tile, directional paint strips) at the center of the circular plan to establish orientation

symbolic2,000–₹15,000medium

Create a central courtyard or atrium inside the circular plan to establish the Brahmasthan and provide directional reference for surrounding rooms

structural20,000–₹100,000high

Use radial partition walls from center to perimeter to create sector-shaped rooms aligned to the 8 directional zones

structural30,000–₹150,000high

Remedies from other traditions

Inscribe the Vastu Purusha Mandala grid onto the circular plan. Create directional sectors.

Vedic Vastu

Apply sector mapping to any curved domestic plan.

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

ManasaraVII · 15-25

The Vritta-griha (circular dwelling) is prescribed for temples and ritual enclosures, not for habitation. The dwelling of man requires the Chaturasra (four-cornered) form to map the Vastu Purusha. Yet if the Vritta form is chosen, the architect must inscribe the Mandala of directions within the circle, dividing it into segments aligned to the Dikpalas.

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 8-12

The dwelling shall be Chaturasra or Ayata — four-cornered or elongated. The Vritta (circle) belongs to the temple and the ritual arena. Should a householder build in the round, let him divide the circle into eight arcs, each governed by its Dikpala, so that the Vastu Purusha may find his limbs within the curve.

MayamatamVI · 20-28

Thirty-two forms of site are enumerated, including the Vritta (circular). The circular site is auspicious for temples and sacred structures. For domestic use, the circle must be treated as a divided form — sector by sector, direction by direction — not as a continuous, undivided curve.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraV · 10-18

Vishvakarma teaches that the Chaturasra form is natural to man's dwelling, as the Vastu Purusha lies with limbs extended to corners. The Vritta form, being without corners, requires the architect to create virtual corners through directional markers and partition walls.

Samarangana SutradharaXI · 30-38

Among the many forms of griha, the Vritta is the most challenging for Vastu application. The circle contains all directions equally, yet without angular markers the directions blur. The architect must impose the Mandala grid upon the circle — dividing it into the 8 or 16 directional segments.

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