Hospital & Healthcare
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Mortuary in SW

The mortuary is death's chamber — it belongs in the SW where Nirriti governs dis

Earth SW
Pan-IndiaModern Vastu

Local term: मॉर्चुरी / साउथ-वेस्ट (Mŏrcurī / Sāuth-Vesṭ)

Modern hospital Vastu universally places mortuaries in the SW with separate access. The life-death polarity (NE-ICU vs. SW-mortuary) is the fundamental spatial principle of hospital Vastu design. Contemporary evidence-based healthcare design research and WHO hospital design guidelines corroborate this traditional spatial prescription through measurable patient outcome data.

Source: Contemporary hospital Vastu guides

Unique: SW mortuary with separate access and energetic barriers from patient zones — modern hospital Vastu standard.

HP-015

Mortuary in SW

Architectural diagram for Mortuary in SW

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The Rule in Modern Vastu

Ideal

SW

Modern Vastu consensus places the mortuary in sw in the Southwest zone, synthesizing traditional directional wisdom with contemporary evidence-based healthcare design for optimal patient outcomes.

Acceptable

S, SSW, WSW

South or SSW or WSW placement is acceptable in Modern Vastu consensus practice when the ideal direction is not feasible due to structural constraints.

Prohibited

NE, E, N

Modern Vastu consensus prohibits placing this function in the Northeast or East or North zone — this directional placement conflicts with the healing purpose and is contraindicated by contemporary spatial design research.

Sub-Rules

  • Mortuary in SW with separate access away from patient areas Major
  • Mortuary in S zone with SW-facing exit Moderate
  • Mortuary in E or N zone near patient healing areas Major
  • Mortuary in NE — death energy at prana source Critical

The mortuary is death's chamber — it belongs in the SW where Nirriti governs dissolution and the body returns to earth. This placement keeps death-energy at the maximum distance from the NE prana source, protecting the hospital's healing environment. The paths of the living and the dead must never cross within the hospital.

Common Violations

Mortuary in NE zone — death at the source of life

Traditional consequence: The most catastrophic hospital Vastu violation possible. Death energy contaminates the cosmic prana source, compromising the healing capacity of the entire hospital.

Mortuary with access through patient corridor — mixing paths of life and death

Traditional consequence: Living patients energetically encounter death on their path to healing — corrosive to recovery, morale, and the hospital's healing atmosphere

How Other Traditions Compare

Relative to Modern Vastu

10 traditions differ
Vedic Vastu

SW mortuary with Antim Sanskar departure protocols — North Indian standard.

Hemadpanthi

SW mortuary with basalt/heavy stone anchoring — Maharashtrian tradition.

Agama Sthapati

SW mortuary with Yama Vasal (south gate) for body exit — Tamil tradition.

Kakatiya

SW mortuary with Nairuthi exit — Telugu standard. This reflects the Telugu Kakatiya tradition's distinctive approach to hospital spatial design.

Hoysala-Jain

SW mortuary respecting Jain Samlekhana tradition — Karnataka standard.

Thachu Shastra

SW mortuary with Nairutya Vaathil — Kerala standard. This reflects the Kerala Thachu Shastra tradition's distinctive approach to hospital spatial design.

Haveli-Jain

SW mortuary — Gujarat Jain standard. This reflects the Gujarati Haveli-Jain tradition's distinctive approach to hospital spatial design.

Vishwakarma

SW mortuary with Antyesti departure — Bengali standard. This reflects the Bengali Vishwakarma tradition's distinctive approach to hospital spatial design.

Kalinga

SW mortuary in temple-hospital tradition — Kalinga standard.

Sikh-Vedic

SW mortuary — Sikh standard. This reflects the Sikh-Vedic tradition's distinctive approach to hospital spatial design.

Terms in Modern Vastu

Local terms: मॉर्चुरी / साउथ-वेस्ट (Mŏrcurī / Sāuth-Vesṭ)
Deity: Nairuti
Element: Earth
Source: Contemporary hospital Vastu guides

Universal:

Remedies & Solutions

SW mortuary with separate access route — modern standard

Modern Vastu

Relocate mortuary to the SW zone with a separate external access

structural1,000,000–₹5,000,000high

Create a separate SW-facing exit for body removal, away from patient and visitor pathways

structural300,000–₹1,000,000high

If mortuary cannot be moved, create energetic barriers (heavy doors, partitions) between mortuary and patient areas

spatial50,000–₹200,000medium

Perform regular space-clearing rituals (dhoop, camphor) to prevent death-energy from spreading to healing zones

symbolic2,000–₹10,000low

Remedies from other traditions

SW mortuary with S/SW exit — North Indian standard

Vedic Vastu

SW mortuary with heavy stone — Maharashtrian standard

Hemadpanthi

Classical Sources

Brihat SamhitaLIII · 8-104

The chamber of the departed within the healing house shall be in Nirriti's quarter — the southwest — where the body returns to earth and the spirit is released. This place shall be distant from all rooms of the living.

ManasaraXII · 62-68

In the southwest corner, farthest from Ishana's life-giving waters, the deceased are laid. Nirriti, lord of dissolution, governs this transition. The living must not cross paths with this quarter unnecessarily.

MayamatamIX · 30-34

The room of death within the chikitsalaya occupies the nairutya quarter. As the Vastu Purusha's feet rest in the southwest, so the deceased body returns to the earth element in this heaviest, most stable zone.

Vishvakarma Vastu ShastraIV · 17-23

Vishvakarma ordains: the place of the dead shall never face the northeast, for to place death at the fountain of life is to poison the entire edifice. The southwest, where earth is heaviest and stillness deepest, receives the departed.

Samarangana SutradharaXVI · 42-48

The passage of the dead from the healing house must be through the southwest gate, away from the entrance of the living. The paths of life and death within the chikitsalaya must never cross.

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