
Patient Bathroom in W/NW
Patient bathrooms belong in the W/NW zone where Varuna governs water's descent a
Local term: पेशेंट बाथरूम / वेस्ट-नॉर्थवेस्ट (Peśeṇṭ Bāthrūm / Vesṭ-Nŏrthvesṭ)
Modern hospital Vastu consistently prescribes W/NW bathroom placement. Contemporary hospital plumbing designs increasingly incorporate directional drainage principles. Contemporary evidence-based healthcare design research and WHO hospital design guidelines corroborate this traditional spatial prescription through measurable patient outcome data.
Source: Contemporary healthcare Vastu compilations; Hospital plumbing design standards
Unique: Modern practice adds exhaust fans, anti-bacterial surfaces, and hands-free fixtures to W/NW bathrooms — combining ancient directional wisdom with modern hygiene technology.
Patient Bathroom in W/NW
Architectural diagram for Patient Bathroom in W/NW

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
W, NW
Modern Vastu consensus places the patient bathroom in w/nw in the West or Northwest zone, synthesizing traditional directional wisdom with contemporary evidence-based healthcare design for optimal patient outcomes.
Acceptable
WNW, NNW, S
S zone bathroom is acceptable. Any placement with proper drainage away from NE is workable.
Prohibited
NE, NNE, ENE
Bathroom in the NE zone contaminates the hospital's primary prana source.
Sub-Rules
- Patient bathroom in W or NW with proper ventilation and drainage▲ Major
- Bathroom in S or SW zone with drainage flowing west or south▲ Moderate
- Bathroom in E or SE zone▼ Moderate
- Bathroom or toilet in NE zone contaminating prana source▼ Major

Principle & Context

Patient bathrooms belong in the W/NW zone where Varuna governs water's descent and Vayu aids ventilation. This placement ensures waste water and energy flow away from the NE prana source, maintaining the hospital's healing environment. A NE bathroom is the most contaminating room-level violation in hospital Vastu.
Common Violations
Patient bathroom or toilet in the NE zone
Traditional consequence: The most contaminating room-level violation in hospital Vastu. Waste energy from the toilet directly pollutes the prana source, compromising the healing capacity of every patient on that floor.
Bathroom drainage flowing towards the NE
Traditional consequence: Even with correct bathroom placement, if drainage lines run NE-ward, waste energy contaminates the prana flow. Drainage must always flow W or S, away from the NE source.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
North Indian hospitals specify the toilet seat should face N or S — not E or W — within the W/NW bathroom.
Maharashtrian tradition uses a raised threshold at the bathroom door to prevent waste energy from flowing into the patient area.
Tamil tradition specifies the bathroom floor should slope towards the W/NW drain — matching the room's micro-drainage with the building's macro-drainage direction.
Telugu tradition uses separate drainage for patient bathrooms and general building drains — preventing waste water mixing.
Jain hospitals maintain the highest cleanliness standards for W/NW bathrooms — reflecting the spiritual importance of purity in healing.
Kerala tradition specifies monsoon-proof bathroom ventilation — operable louvers on the W/NW wall for exhaust without rain entry.
Gujarati Jain hospitals use water recycling systems that process waste water in the W before any drainage — combining Vastu with water conservation.
Bengali tradition places a Neem or Tulsi plant near the bathroom door — natural air purification between the waste zone and patient zone.
Coastal Kalinga hospitals ensure bathroom drainage flows westward, away from the eastern sea-prana source.
Sikh hospitals maintain the highest bathroom hygiene standards — reflecting the Guru tradition of Sucha (cleanliness as a spiritual practice).
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
W/NW bathroom with modern hygiene features — contemporary standard
Modern VastuRelocate patient bathrooms to the W or NW zone of each room
Redirect drainage to flow W or S, away from the NE
If bathroom cannot be moved, install a heavy door between the bathroom and patient area, keep the bathroom impeccably clean, and install exhaust ventilation
Place a salt water vessel or copper vessel at the bathroom door to absorb negative energy before it enters the patient space
Remedies from other traditions
W/NW bathroom with N/S-facing toilet seat — North Indian standard
Vedic VastuRaised bathroom threshold — Maharashtrian tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The privy and bathing chamber of the patient room shall be in the west or northwest, where Varuna's waters flow downward and Vayu carries away all impurity. The waste waters must never flow towards the northeast, where they would contaminate the source of healing prana.”
“In the chikitsalaya, the shauchalaya (toilet) occupies the vayavya or pashchima quarter. Water flows from east to west, from purity to drainage, as the rivers flow from mountain to sea. The toilet in Ishanya would poison every patient's healing prana.”
“The patient's bathing and toilet chamber lies in the west of the healing room. The water of washing and waste departs through the western or northwestern drain, carrying impurity away from the sacred northeast prana source.”
“Vishvakarma commands: the shauchalaya within the patient chamber occupies the pashchima or vayavya quarter. No waste water shall approach the Ishanya — where it would corrupt the prana-vayu that heals all patients within.”

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