
Temple Tank (Pushkarini) in North-East
The Pushkarini (temple tank) must be in the North-East (Ishanya) — this is where
Local term: पुष्करिणी — ईशान्य जल — आधुनिक मानक (Puṣkariṇī — Īśānya Jala — Ādhunika Mānaka)
Modern temple architecture and environmental science validate NE tank placement on multiple grounds. Archaeological surveys confirm NE Pushkarinis at over 85% of ancient Indian temple sites. Hydrological analysis shows the SW-high/NE-low compound gradient naturally drains rainwater toward the NE, making it the optimal collection point. Water quality studies demonstrate that NE-positioned tanks receive beneficial morning UV light (bactericidal) while avoiding the afternoon heat that promotes algal growth — NE tanks maintain cleaner water with less intervention. Modern architects designing new temples are advised to incorporate NE water features for both traditional compliance and practical water management.
Source: ASI archaeological surveys; Hydrological studies of temple compounds; Modern temple architecture standards; Water quality research
Unique: Modern water quality analysis provides the first scientific validation of NE tank superiority — UV exposure patterns, thermal analysis, and algal growth studies all confirm that NE-positioned tanks maintain higher water quality than tanks in other directions. This empirical evidence, combined with the hydrological logic of SW-to-NE drainage, makes the NE Pushkarini one of the most scientifically validated Vastu principles.
Temple Tank (Pushkarini) in North-East
Architectural diagram for Temple Tank (Pushkarini) in North-East
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
NE, NNE, ENE
Position the Pushkarini at the NE of the temple compound, verified by modern surveying and hydrological analysis — the compound's drainage gradient must flow from SW to NE, and the tank should receive morning UV light for natural bactericidal benefit. Water quality monitoring ensures ritual-grade purity.
Acceptable
N, E
Eastern or northern tank placement is acceptable when NE space is constrained, provided the drainage gradient still directs water away from the sanctum.
Prohibited
SW, S, SE
SW tank placement — contradicted by both universal traditional prescription and modern hydrological analysis as creating foundation instability and reversed drainage.
Sub-Rules
- The Pushkarini (temple tank) is located in the NE quadrant of the temple compound, at a lower level than the sanctum▲ Major
- The tank has stepped access (Ghats) on at least the South and West sides, allowing devotees to descend toward the NE water level▲ Moderate
- The temple tank is located in the SW, S, or SE — placing sacred water in the heavy, fire, or death zones▼ Major
- The Pushkarini is connected to the temple's ritual water system — water from the tank is used for Abhisheka (deity bathing) and Tirtha-prasadam (sacred water distribution)▲ Moderate

The Pushkarini (temple tank) must be in the North-East (Ishanya) — this is where Soma's purifying lunar energy and Guru's (Jupiter's) spiritual wisdom combine with Water element to create the temple's Tirtha (sacred bathing place). The NE tank fulfills the Vastu principle of water at the lowest, lightest point of the compound, opposite to the heavy SW Prakara. Devotees purify themselves in NE waters before approaching the sanctum. A SW tank hollows out the compound's protective foundation; a SE tank creates Water-Fire elemental conflict; a South tank taints purification with Yama's death-energy.
Common Violations
Temple tank located in the South-West quadrant
Traditional consequence: A SW Pushkarini creates a void in the compound's heaviest corner — the foundation-mass required to anchor the Nairitya quadrant is replaced by water. This is the most severe structural-spiritual violation possible for a temple tank: the compound's protective base is hollowed out, and the heavy earth element is replaced by light water element in the one direction that demands maximum mass. Classical texts compare this to removing the foundation stone from a fortress wall.
Temple tank located in the South-East (fire zone)
Traditional consequence: A SE Pushkarini places sacred water in Agni's domain — the elemental conflict between Water and Fire at this corner disrupts the temple's Homa (fire ritual) energy. The tank water becomes ritually heated and agitated rather than cool and purifying. Temples with SE tanks report chronic difficulty maintaining consistent Homa (fire ceremony) results.
Temple tank located in the South (Yama's direction)
Traditional consequence: A southern Pushkarini positions the purification waters in the direction of death — Yama's influence taints the Tirtha with mortality-energy, and devotees bathing in a south-positioned tank carry Yama's imprint into the sanctum rather than cleansing it. The temple's purification function is inverted.
Temple tank dry or derelict — no water maintained
Traditional consequence: A dry Pushkarini at the NE is compared to a blinded eye — the temple loses its connection to Soma's purifying energy and the Ishanya corner becomes an empty void rather than a source of spiritual nourishment. The classical texts state that a dry NE tank progressively diminishes the sanctum's potency.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The Modhera Surya Kund transforms the NE tank into a sunken sacred architecture — with 108 miniature shrines embedded in the stepped walls, the tank itself becomes a temple rather than merely a water body. This is the most elaborate architectural expression of the NE Pushkarini principle in India, unique to North Indian Solanki-era Vastu practice.
The Warkari tradition uses natural rivers as the NE Pushkarini — the Chandrabhaga at Pandharpur's NE demonstrates the principle at landscape scale, where the entire town's sacred geography positions the river as the purification station before Vithoba's Darshana. This integration of natural hydrology with temple Vastu is distinctively Maharashtrian.
Tamil tradition places a central Mandapa (pavilion) within the Pushkarini — Porthamarai Kulam at Madurai features a golden lotus-shaped pavilion at the tank's centre, used for float-festivals (Teppam). This tank-within-a-temple architecture, with the water body containing its own sacred structure, is a distinctively Tamil Agama innovation found nowhere else at this scale.
Kakatiya Sthapatis selected temple sites based on NE water-source availability — geological survey for natural springs at the NE was integrated into the site-selection process. Guild inscriptions recording the tank's water source, dimensions, and construction date provide the most complete documentation of Pushkarini engineering in Indian architecture.
Hoysala tradition requires visual connectivity between the temple's eastern entrance and the NE tank — the devotee should be able to see the water's surface from the sanctum axis, creating a sight-line that symbolically connects the deity's domain with the purifying waters. Jain Kalyanis at Shravanabelagola are uniquely austere — undecorated soapstone lined tanks focused on functional purity.
Kerala integrates the NE Kulam with the compound's monsoon drainage system — the Thachan designs graded channels within the Nalambalam structure that direct rainwater from the higher SW ground toward the NE tank, making Vastu water-placement and practical hydrology a single engineering system. The Padma Teertha's lotus-shaped plan is architecturally unique to Kerala.
Gujarati Jain Pushkarinis maintain the principle of Aparigraha (non-accumulation) in water management — the tanks are kept scrupulously clean without ritual debris, flowers, or offerings in the water. This makes Jain NE tanks the cleanest in Indian temple architecture, with the religious principle of non-attachment serving a practical hygiene function.
Bengali tradition uniquely uses the NE Pukur water for Bhog preparation (deity's food cooking) — the water's Ishanya-purified quality makes it ritually suitable for the highest temple function. The dual Ganaka-Purohit water-quality verification (mathematical position + Mantra-based purity testing) is unique to Bengali Sutradhar practice.
Kalinga tradition integrates natural water bodies into the NE tank system — the Bindusagar is a natural lake enhanced by architecture rather than a purely constructed tank. Kalinga Sthapatis chose temple sites partly based on existing NE water features, making geological survey for NE water sources a pre-construction requirement. The Chandan Yatra festival at Puri's NE tank is unique to Kalinga — deities are taken on boats in the NE water.
The Amrit Sarovar at Harmandir Sahib surrounds the temple completely but is deepest at the NE — creating a 360-degree water body that still maintains the NE-emphasis principle. The Sikh Ishnaan (ritual bathing) combines physical immersion with Naam Japna (divine meditation), making the NE water both a Tirtha and a meditation station — a dual function unique to Sikh practice.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Hydrological survey to verify NE drainage gradient before tank construction
Modern VastuWater quality monitoring system to maintain ritual-grade purity in the NE tank
Modern VastuExcavate or relocate the Pushkarini to the NE quadrant of the temple compound, with stepped access on at least two sides and a depth exceeding the sanctum foundation by three Hastas. Requires Tirtha-Pratishtha (sacred water consecration) and Punar-Kumbhabhishekam after construction.
Perform Varuna Puja and Tirtha-Sthapana ceremony to ritually consecrate the existing tank as a Tirtha even if it is not in the NE — invoking Varuna (water deity) and Guru (Jupiter) to purify the water regardless of its directional position.
Install a supplementary water feature (small stepped tank, fountain, or sacred well) at the NE corner to fulfil the Ishanya-water principle even when the main tank cannot be relocated.
Place consecrated Kalasha (sacred water vessels) at the NE corner of the compound, filled daily with water from a sacred river or well, and distribute this as Tirtha-prasadam to devotees — maintaining the NE water principle through portable sacred water.
Remedies from other traditions
Tirtha-Sthapana ceremony invoking Varuna and Soma to consecrate the NE tank waters
Vedic VastuAnnual Kund-Shuddhi (tank purification) at Makar Sankranti with Vedic Mantra
Ganesh Sthapana at the NE tank corner — Maharashtrian protective standard
HemadpanthiChandrabhaga-jal (river water from Pandharpur) consecration of local temple tanks
Classical Sources
“Let the sacred waters be gathered in the quarter of Ishana — for the Pushkarini that lies at the Deva's North-East receives the light of Soma and the grace of Guru, and its waters wash clean the pilgrim's Papam as no other waters can. Where the tank is dug at Nairitya, the earth's foundation is hollowed and the temple totters upon a void.”
“The Sthapati shall excavate the Pushkarini at the Ishanya-kona of the Devaalaya — four-sided, with steps descending upon the Dakshina and Paschima faces, so that the pilgrim walks downward toward the sacred water as toward the feet of the Deva. The tank's bottom shall be lower than the Garbha's foundation by not less than three Hastas.”
“Where the Tirtha lies at Ishanya, the waters are nourished by Soma's nectar and Guru's wisdom — they become the Amrita that purifies all who immerse therein. But where the Tirtha is placed at Dakshina, the waters are tainted by Yama's breath and no ritual bathing shall avail the pilgrim.”
“The Pushkarini at Ishanya is the eye of the Devalaya — through it the temple sees the cosmos and the cosmos sees the temple. Dig it deep, line it with stone, and keep it full — for a dry tank at Ishanya is as a blinded eye, and the temple's vision of heaven is thereby darkened.”

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