
Rainwater Harvesting in North-East
Rainwater harvesting belongs in the NE — Soma's water-element zone naturally col
Local term: वर्षा जल संचयन — ईशान्य (Varṣā Jala Saṁcayana — Īśānya)
Modern CGWB and municipal mandates align with NE harvesting — the natural SW-to-NE compound slope directs all surface runoff to the NE. Underground sumps at the NE minimize pumping costs (gravity-fed). Recharge wells improve groundwater levels. The Chennai model (India's most successful) validates NE collection.
Source: CGWB guidelines; Chennai RWH model; NBC 2016; Vastu
Unique: NE gravity-fed collection minimises pumping costs — distinctive to Modern Vastu practice per the contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions.
Rainwater Harvesting in North-East
Architectural diagram for Rainwater Harvesting in North-East
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
NE, NNE, ENE
NE underground sump with gravity-fed roof collection, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
N, E
Placement in adjacent East or North zone is acceptable when Northeast is not feasible, with evidence-based spatial correction as compensating measure.
Prohibited
SW, SE
SW waterlogging; SE fire-water conflict.
Sub-Rules
- Rainwater harvesting sump is in the NE zone▲ Moderate
- Harvesting sump is underground (preserving NE openness)▲ Minor
- Recharge well is in the NE (water returning to earth in water zone)▲ Minor
- Rainwater harvesting in SW or SE▼ Moderate

Rainwater harvesting belongs in the NE — Soma's water-element zone naturally collects rain at the compound's lowest point. Underground sump preserves NE openness. SW harvesting waterloggs the earth zone; SE harvesting creates fire-water conflict.
Common Violations
Rainwater harvesting in SW — waterlogging the earth zone
Traditional consequence: Standing water in the SW waterloggs the earth-element zone — foundations weaken, the compound's grounding energy becomes unstable, and the SW's natural density is compromised by water intrusion.
Rainwater harvesting in SE — water in fire zone
Traditional consequence: Water collection in the fire zone creates elemental conflict — fire-element equipment near the harvesting sump experiences corrosion and humidity. The stored water absorbs fire energy and becomes energetically impure.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Soma's water-gift collected at NE — distinctive to Vedic practice per the Brihat Samhita and Vishwakarma Prakash.
Paus Pani Sangraha at NE — this reflects the Hemadpanthi tradition where the Samarangana Sutradhara and Hemadpanthi building traditions govern factory layout, manufacturing zone organization, and industrial facility planning.
Chennai mandate aligns with NE pada placement — distinctive to Agama Sthapati practice per the Mayamatam and Kamika Agama.
Varsham Neeru at Ishanyam — this reflects the Kakatiya tradition where the Samarangana Sutradhara and Kakatiya inscriptions govern factory layout, manufacturing zone organization, and industrial facility planning.
Water conservation as environmental Ahimsa — distinctive to Hoysala-Jain practice per the Manasara and Aparajitapriccha.
Large NE capacity for Kerala's heavy rainfall — distinctive to Thachu Shastra practice per the Thachu Shastra and Manushyalaya Chandrika.
Critical NE harvesting for semi-arid climate — distinctive to Haveli-Jain practice per the Vishwakarma Prakash and Jain Vastu texts.
Natural NE slope supports collection — distinctive to Vishwakarma practice per the Shilpa Prakasha and Vishwakarma guild traditions.
Coastal rain collection at NE — this reflects the Kalinga tradition where the Shilpa Prakasha and Kalinga temple texts govern factory layout, manufacturing zone organization, and industrial facility planning.
Water conservation for Langar Seva — distinctive to Sikh-Vedic practice per the Vedic Vastu principles adapted through Sikh architectural traditions.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Industrial facility correction per Modern manufacturing layout
Modern VastuInstall an underground rainwater harvesting sump in the NE zone with rooftop collection gutters directing water to the NE. Include sand-gravel filtration before the sump.
If the harvesting sump is not in the NE, install a recharge well in the NE that receives overflow from the existing sump — at least some water returns to earth in the water zone.
Ensure all surface drainage channels converge toward the NE before entering the harvesting sump — even if the sump is elsewhere, the water flow path passes through the NE zone.
Remedies from other traditions
Industrial facility correction per Vedic manufacturing layout
Vedic VastuIndustrial facility correction per Maharashtrian manufacturing layout
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The vessel that collects Varuna's rain — the Megha-Jala-Sangraha — shall be in the Ishanya, where water naturally gathers at the lowest point of the compound. Soma's quarter receives and purifies rain, and the underground sump stores it for dry-season use.”
“The Varsha-Jala-Kosha (rain-water reservoir) shall be at the Ishanya pada — where the compound's slope naturally directs all surface water. The underground tank preserves Ishanya's openness while collecting Soma's precious water gift.”
“Rain falling upon the compound gathers at the NE — the lowest, purest point. An underground vessel at the NE stores this divine water without disrupting the zone's sacred openness. This stored rain becomes the compound's reserve of purified Soma-water.”
“Vishvakarma collected celestial rain at the NE of the divine compound — where Soma purified each droplet and stored it underground for the dry cosmic season. This is the template for all earthly water harvesting — NE collection in underground vessels.”

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