
Veranda and Semi-Open Space
The veranda or semi-open space should be on the North or East side of the dwelli
Local term: Balcony, veranda, sit-out, covered patio, deck (Balcony, veranda, sit-out, covered patio, deck)
Modern Vastu practice considers balcony/veranda direction among the top apartment selection criteria. N or E-facing balconies are strongly preferred. SW-only balconies are flagged as a concern. Practitioners recommend using the N/E balcony as the primary sit-out regardless of size.
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis
Unique: Modern apartment balcony direction is the most practical application of this ancient veranda principle — it directly influences apartment selection and furnishing decisions.
Veranda and Semi-Open Space
Architectural diagram for Veranda and Semi-Open Space

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, E, NE
Main balcony or sit-out on N or E side. NE-corner balcony is optimal. Use it as primary outdoor living space.
Acceptable
N, E
N or E-facing balcony as primary sit-out, even if smaller than S/W balcony.
Prohibited
SW, S
SW-only balcony with no N or E semi-open space — the dwelling breathes only from the heavy quadrant.
Sub-Rules
- Veranda or sit-out on North or East side of the dwelling▲ Major
- Veranda on SW or S side — heavy zone exposed to semi-open space▼ Major
- Wrap-around veranda covering N and E sides▲ Major
- NE corner specifically has a covered semi-open space▲ Moderate

Principle & Context

The veranda or semi-open space should be on the North or East side of the dwelling, acting as a prana-filtering buffer zone. The NE veranda is most auspicious. A SW veranda destabilizes the earth-anchor zone by opening the heaviest corner to wind and sky.
Common Violations
Veranda or balcony on SW side only
Traditional consequence: The earth-anchor zone is destabilized — the heaviest, most grounded corner is opened to wind and sky, losing its protective enclosure. The family's authority center (SW) becomes exposed and vulnerable. Financial stability and family authority weaken.
South-only veranda without any N or E semi-open space
Traditional consequence: The dwelling breathes only from Yama's direction — harsh afternoon sun and heavy southern energy enter the home without the balancing effect of NE morning light. Occupants may experience increased stress and health concerns.
No veranda or semi-open space on any side
Traditional consequence: The dwelling lacks a breathing zone — a transition space between outside and inside. Energy enters directly through doors without being filtered. The house feels sealed and isolated from beneficial environmental forces.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition treats the veranda as the dwelling's public face — it must face the auspicious directions to present the right energy to the world.
The Osari is a defining feature of Marathi domestic architecture — always facing the Chowk on the N or E side.
The Tamil Thinnai is architecturally unique — a raised platform veranda that is simultaneously public space and domestic buffer.
Telugu tradition treats the veranda as the dwelling's Prana filter — external air is processed here before entering rooms.
The Jagali serves as both veranda and meditation platform — correct orientation toward E or N supports both functions.
Kerala has both the Poomukham (external veranda) and Chuttu-Veranda (internal circulation veranda) — a double layer of semi-open space.
The Otla is a uniquely Gujarati feature — a raised street-level veranda that serves as both public space and Vastu buffer.
Bengali apartment balcony orientation is the modern equivalent of veranda direction — practitioners strongly recommend N/E balcony as primary sit-out.
Coastal Odisha homes orient verandas toward the East — the sea breeze from the Bay of Bengal carries maximum prana.
Punjab's climate makes the veranda essential — the N or E-facing Baramda provides shade from harsh western sun.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
If the main balcony is on the S or W side, create a small sit-out zone with plants near the nearest N or E window
Modern VastuUse the N/E balcony as the primary gathering space, even if smaller
Modern VastuIf the main balcony is on the S or SW, create a small sit-out area with plants near an N or E window to serve as a symbolic veranda
Perform Vayu Puja at the semi-open space — invoke the wind deity to ensure healthy Prana circulation through this transitional buffer zone
Add a jali screen or partial wall to a SW veranda to provide enclosure while retaining ventilation
Place Tulsi or tall green plants on the NE-most corner of any existing balcony to symbolically activate the Ishanya energy on the semi-open space
Remedies from other traditions
Place a Vastu Yantra at the affected zone per Brihat Samhita prescription
Vedic VastuVedic Agni Hotra at the transition point to purify and harmonize spatial energy
Apply Hemadpanthi spatial correction principles for veranda and semi-open space
HemadpanthiTulsi Vrindavan placement to purify the affected zone
Classical Sources
“The Alinda (veranda) shall grace the Uttara or Purva face of the dwelling. The semi-open boundary receives the early sun and auspicious Vayu before they enter the sealed chambers. The householder sits on the Alinda to greet the morning — receiving prana directly.”
“The Mukha-Mandapa (front veranda) is prescribed for the Purva or Uttara facade. This semi-open hall serves as the transition from the outer world to the inner sanctity. Here guests are received, and here the dwelling breathes — pulling fresh Vayu through its open face.”
“The veranda or covered porch should face Purva Disha to receive the first light of Surya, or Uttara Disha to receive the gentle wind from Kubera's quarter. A veranda facing Dakshina Disha receives harsh afternoon heat and Yama's influence.”
“Vishvakarma prescribes the Alinda on the Purva or Uttara wall. The semi-open space is the dwelling's lung — it breathes in prana for the entire house. A dwelling without a veranda on the N or E side is like a body with shallow breath — it receives insufficient vital force.”
“The Alinda of the griha faces the auspicious quarters — Purva for Surya-prana, Uttara for Kubera's blessings. The veranda on the Nairutya face is prohibited — the heavy earth-corner must remain enclosed and solid, not opened to the sky and wind.”

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