
The Jalousie / Louver Window
Louver/jalousie windows are the ideal Vayu Niyantrana (wind-control) device for
Local term: लूवर खिड़की / जैलसी — एडजस्टेबल स्लैट विंडो (Lūvar Khiḍkī / Jailasī — Eḍjasṭebal Slaiṭ Viṇḍo)
Modern Vastu recommends louver/jalousie windows on NW walls for optimal wind control — aligning with the prevailing wind direction in most Indian locations. The adjustable nature of louvers makes them superior to fixed windows for ventilation management. Modern alternatives include tilt-and-turn windows that offer similar adjustability. SW louvers should be avoided due to inherent gaps in the sealed position.
Source: Contemporary Vastu + ventilation design standards
Unique: Tilt-and-turn as modern alternative — similar adjustability with better sealing.
The Jalousie / Louver Window
Architectural diagram for The Jalousie / Louver Window
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
NW, N, W
Louver window on NW wall for prevailing wind capture and control, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance before the Griha-pravesha ceremony.
Acceptable
E, NE, SE
Louver on N, E, or W wall with functional adjustment mechanism.
Prohibited
SW
Placing the jalousie / louver window in SW (Nairuti's zone) violates Modern Vastu principles — the contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions warn against this placement as it disrupts the directional energy balance that the architect must maintain for the dwelling's wellbeing.
Sub-Rules
- Louver window placed on NW wall for optimal wind control▲ Moderate
- Louver slats are adjustable and fully functional▲ Minor
- Louver slats are jammed, broken, or non-adjustable▼ Moderate
- Louver window on SW wall admitting continuous Nairritya energy▼ Moderate

Louver/jalousie windows are the ideal Vayu Niyantrana (wind-control) device for NW walls — adjustable slats give occupants mastery over airflow from the wind direction. SW louvers are problematic because inherent gaps allow continuous Nairritya energy entry even when closed.
Common Violations
Louver window on SW with gaps that cannot fully seal
Traditional consequence: Nairritya Pravesha (SW energy entry) — the inherent gap in louver windows on the Nairritya face allows continuous heavy energy entry even when nominally closed. Unlike a solid window, the louver never fully seals the SW direction.
Non-functional louver with stuck or broken slats
Traditional consequence: Vayu Niyantrana Hani (wind control loss) — a louver window stuck open admits uncontrolled Vayu; stuck closed blocks Vayu entirely. Either extreme defeats the louver's purpose as a precision Vayu-control device.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Rajasthani Jhilmil — traditional wooden slat window for NW wind control.
Wada Jhilmil — managing monsoon rain-and-wind with adjustable slats.
Tamil monsoon louver — glass slats for NW monsoon wind and rain management.
Kakatiya fixed stone louvers — permanent temple ventilation in carved stone.
Hoysala permanent stone louvers — carved stone slats for eternal ventilation.
Kerala Chillappēṭṭi — sophisticated teak louver for NW monsoon management.
Haveli dust-filtering Jhilmil — slats managing arid winds and desert dust.
Bengali Jhāp Janālā — slat window for managing delta humidity and monsoon wind.
Kalinga stone louver — permanent carved-stone ventilation slats in temples.
Punjabi seasonal Jhilmil — adjustable for hot summer breeze and cold winter restriction.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face Northwest — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuRepair or replace stuck louver mechanisms to restore adjustable ventilation control
Replace a SW louver window with a solid casement window for better sealing
Add weather stripping to louver slats to improve closure seal on any direction
Remedies from other traditions
Adjust door orientation to face Vayavya — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Vayavya — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“A Gavaksha with adjustable Pattikas (slats) that can be tilted to control the Vayu's entry is the most sophisticated form of Vayu Niyantrana (wind control). Such a window on the Vayavya (NW) face gives the occupant mastery over airflow — admitting the cooling breeze when desired and restricting it when the wind is too strong.”
“The Vayavya (NW) direction is the seat of Vayu — a window here that can modulate the wind's strength is a Vayu Yantra (wind instrument). Adjustable slats allow the occupant to welcome the breeze or temper the gale, maintaining the room's Vayu Santulan (air balance) through all seasons.”
“The Sthapati may create a Gavaksha with Chala Pattikas (movable slats) for rooms requiring variable Vayu control. This is most effective on the Vayavya (NW) face where winds are strongest, and on the Dakshina-Paschima (S-W) faces where the occupant may wish to restrict hot energy while maintaining some air exchange.”
“Vishvakarma designed windows with moving parts for the Vayavya dwelling face — as the rudder controls a ship's relationship with the wind, the adjustable Pattika-Gavaksha controls the room's relationship with Vayu. On the Nairritya (SW), even movable slats cannot fully contain the heavy energy — a solid barrier is preferred.”

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