
Security Lighting
Security lighting belongs on the S/W boundaries — the heavy, defensive flanks of
Local term: सुरक्षा प्रकाश व्यवस्था (Surakṣā Prakāśa Vyavasthā)
Modern practitioners recommend motion-sensor floodlights and solar-powered LED security lights on S/W compound walls. This complements the N/E decorative garden lighting (CL-011) — creating a functional differentiation: N/E for welcome and beauty, S/W for security and protection. Smart security cameras integrate with lighting for comprehensive S/W coverage.
Source: Contemporary Vastu compilations; Home security design
Unique: Modern implementation creates a deliberate N/E vs S/W functional split: welcoming decorative light on N/E, protective security light on S/W — fulfilling both Vastu and modern security principles.
Security Lighting
Architectural diagram for Security Lighting
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
S, W
Security lights concentrated on S and W boundaries, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
SW, SSW, WSW, NW, SE
All boundaries benefit from security lighting with S/W emphasis.
Prohibited
Security lighting on all boundaries is fine — but the S/W boundaries should have more security emphasis. Neglecting S/W security while over-illuminating N/E for security creates a defensive imbalance.
Sub-Rules
- Security lights concentrated on S and W boundaries▲ Moderate
- S/W boundaries dark with no security lighting▼ Moderate

Security lighting belongs on the S/W boundaries — the heavy, defensive flanks of the dwelling. Yama (south) and Shani (west) quarters are the protective wall of the home. Bright perimeter lighting here strengthens the defensive character and deters both physical and energetic intrusion.
Common Violations
S/W boundaries completely dark with no security lighting
Traditional consequence: The dwelling's defensive flanks are unguarded — vulnerability to both physical intrusion and negative energy entering from Yama and Shani quarters.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition connects S/W security lighting to Arthashastra's fortification principles — the same logic governs both military and domestic defense.
Maratha Wada architecture integrates security lighting into the defensive wall design — mashals (torches) in iron brackets on S/W walls.
Tamil Kavalar Vilakku is a named, specific lamp type for security — demonstrating a dedicated security-lighting tradition.
Kakatiya fort-lighting tradition provides military precedent for S/W perimeter emphasis — directly applicable to domestic compounds.
Clear functional differentiation — S/W for security illumination, N/E for decorative/devotional illumination.
Kerala's taller S/W compound walls naturally require more lighting — the architectural defense and lighting defense are structurally integrated.
Treasury placement in SW reinforces the security-lighting imperative — the most valuable assets and the strongest light converge in the heavy quarter.
Bengali concept of Bharer Dik Rakhsha (heavy-direction protection) provides a unified framework for wall height, material strength, and lighting intensity on S/W.
Jagannath temple compound perimeter lighting provides the institutional model for domestic S/W security emphasis.
Sikh tradition connects S/W security lighting to the broader principle of Chardi Kala — maintaining vigilance through illumination.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Motion-sensor floodlights on S/W walls; solar LED security strips on compound top; smart cameras with integrated lighting on S/W.
Modern VastuInstall motion-sensor floodlights on S and W boundary walls
Add solar-powered LED perimeter lights along S and W compound walls
Place a bright warm-white wall-mounted light at the SW corner post — the heaviest corner deserves the strongest guardian light
Remedies from other traditions
Bright torches or modern floodlights on S/W compound walls; motion sensors on S/W entry points.
Vedic VastuWall-mounted lights on S/W compound walls; high-brightness fixtures at SW corner.
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The quarters of Yama and Varuna require the watchman's flame — let the defensive side burn bright against intrusion, as the warrior guards the kingdom's heavy flank.”
“The dwelling's southern and western walls are its fortress flanks. Torches upon these walls repel both visible and invisible threats from the quarters of death and restriction.”
“Vishvakarma assigns the guardian flame to Yama's and Shani's quarters — the south and west walls that shield the dwelling demand illumination for protection.”
“The Ratnakara instructs: perimeter flame on the heavy flanks — south and west — serves as the dwelling's luminous shield against misfortune from Yama and Shani quarters.”

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