Entrance & Doors
ED-099★★☆ Major Full Details

The Compound Wall Gate

The compound wall gate is the Pratham Dvara (first gate) of the Vastu-Kshetra —

Air N/E/NE
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: कंपाउंड गेट — बाहरी दरवाज़ा / प्राचीर द्वार (Kampāũṇḍ Geṭ — Bāhrī Darvāzā / Prāchīra Dvāra)

Modern Vastu recommends compound gate placement on N, E, or NE wall — consistent with the main entrance direction. Road access may dictate gate position, in which case the best pada within the available wall should be selected. The compound gate sets the first impression and should be architecturally dignified — a grand gate with a humble main door creates a disconnect. Gate and main door should communicate design coherence.

Source: Contemporary Vastu + compound design standards

Unique: Gate-door coherence — compound gate and main door communicating design unity.

ED-099

The Compound Wall Gate

Architectural diagram for The Compound Wall Gate

RadialGrid9163281○ MarmaNorthMain DoorNNEMain DoorNortheastMain DoorENEMain DoorEastMain DoorESEMain DoorSoutheastSSESouthSSWSouthwestWSWWestWNWNorthwestNNWMain DoorNNNENEENEEESESESSESSSWSWWSWWWNWNWNNWCenterBrahmaIdealProhibitedAirguruvastu.comgv01<!-- gv-origin:guruvastu.com -->

The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

N, E, NE

Compound gate on N/E/NE wall aligned with main door direction, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.

Acceptable

NW, W

Best pada within road-facing wall; gate and main door design coherence.

Prohibited

S, SW, SE

Placing the compound wall gate in S (Yama's zone) or SW (Nairuti's zone) or SE (Agni's zone) violates Modern Vastu principles — the contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions warn against this placement as it disrupts the directional energy balance that the architect must maintain for the dwelling's wellbeing.

Sub-Rules

  • Compound gate faces N, E, or NE matching main door pada rules Moderate
  • Compound gate direction aligns with main door direction Moderate
  • Compound gate faces South or SW Major
  • Compound gate and main door face conflicting directions Moderate

Principle & Context

The compound wall gate is the Pratham Dvara (first gate) of the Vastu-Kshetra — it should face N, E, or NE following the same pada rules as the main entrance. The gate direction affects the entire plot, not just the building. Alignment between compound gate and main door creates energetic coherence. A S/SW gate curses the entire compound with Yama/Nairritya energy.

Common Violations

Compound wall gate facing South or Southwest

Traditional consequence: Yama Pravesha at Pratham Dvara (death-energy at first gate) — the most inauspicious energy enters the plot as its first greeting. This affects all occupants and visitors, setting a negative energetic tone before anyone reaches the main door. The entire Vastu-Kshetra is overshadowed by the Dakshina Prachira Dvara.

Compound gate and main door facing opposite or conflicting directions

Traditional consequence: Prana Virodha (energy conflict) — the two gateways pull Prana in opposing directions, creating confusion and scatter in the dwelling's energy circulation. The visitor's movement from gate to door involves an energy reversal rather than a smooth progression.

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

Rajasthani Pol — compound gate as grand architectural statement.

Hemadpanthi

Wada orientation — compound gate determines Wada's public relationship.

Agama Sthapati

Tamil design-from-gate — compound gate as first architectural decision.

Kakatiya

Kakatiya fort-gate scaling — military gate principles applied to domestic compounds.

Hoysala-Jain

Hoysala temple-to-domestic gate — sacred compound principles scaled to homes.

Thachu Shastra

Kerala Paḍippura — India's most developed compound gatehouse tradition.

Haveli-Jain

Gujarati Pol — communal compound gate governing cluster of houses.

Vishwakarma

Bengali road-constrained pada — selecting best pada within available frontage.

Kalinga

Kalinga Gopura scaling — temple gate principles applied to domestic compounds.

Sikh-Vedic

Sikh Pūrbī gate — morning Ardās facing sunrise from within compound.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: कंपाउंड गेट — बाहरी दरवाज़ा / प्राचीर द्वार (Kampāũṇḍ Geṭ — Bāhrī Darvāzā / Prāchīra Dvāra)
Deity: Kubera (N) / Indra (E) / Ishaan (Shiva) (NE)
Element: Water (Jala) / Fire (Agni)
Source: Contemporary Vastu + compound design standards

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction

Modern Vastu

Relocate the compound gate to N, E, or NE wall of the compound if road access permits

structural15,000–₹80,000high

Add a secondary pedestrian gate on N/E wall to provide an auspicious entry option alongside the vehicle gate

structural10,000–₹40,000medium

Place auspicious symbols (Om, Swastik, Toran) on a South-facing compound gate to mitigate Yama energy

symbolic500–₹5,000low

Remedies from other traditions

Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan

Vedic Vastu

Adjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

ManasaraIX · 45-54

The Prachira Dvara (compound wall gate) is the first Dvara of the Vastu — it is the mouth through which all energy enters the plot. The Prachira Dvara shall face Uttara, Purva, or Ishanya — these auspicious directions bless the entire Vastu-Kshetra from the boundary inward. The Prachira Dvara pada shall align with the Griha Dvara pada for Samanvaya (coherence).

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 8-14

The compound gate is the Pratham Parvesh (first entry) — it governs the Prathama Anubhava (first experience) of the Vastu. When the Prachira Dvara faces Uttara or Purva, the visitor receives auspicious energy before even setting foot within the dwelling. A Dakshina-facing Prachira Dvara sends Yama's energy as the very first greeting — an inauspicious beginning to every visit.

MayamatamIX · 22-28

The Sthapati shall position the Prachira Dvara in the same direction and pada as the Griha Dvara — the two gates form a single Prana pathway from the Loka (world) to the Griha (home). When both Dvara align, the Prana flows smoothly from street to dwelling. When they oppose each other, the Prana is confused and scattered between entry and entry.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraVIII · 30-36

Vishvakarma designated the Prachira Dvara as the Vastu's first defense and first welcome — it must face the direction of prosperity (Uttara) or vitality (Purva). The compound gate set in a prohibited pada curses the entire Vastu-Kshetra, not merely the building, for its influence extends across the full plot from boundary to boundary.

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