
Diagonal Energy Axis NE-SW
The NE-SW diagonal is the primary energy axis — the Vastu Rekhā. The gradient fl
Local term: N/A (NE-SW Diagonal, Energy Axis, Vastu Spine, Primary Gradient)
Modern Vastu treats this diagonal as the single most important axis to evaluate. The NE-SW gradient determines the dwelling's fundamental quality. This is the first metric checked in any Vastu audit — before room placement, door direction, or any other parameter.
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis — all traditions unanimous
Unique: Modern practice validates structurally — SW-heavy construction resists prevailing wind and weather better.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
Modern Vastu consensus places diagonal energy axis ne-sw in the zone of the dwelling — this synthesized pan-Indian guideline draws from all classical traditions and is validated by contemporary architectural analysis of natural light, ventilation, and spatial ergonomics.
Acceptable
In Modern Vastu practice, minor obstructions along the axis (furniture, interior walls) are tolerable if the overall gradient remains correct — NE lighter than SW. A corridor or passage along this diagonal can serve as an energy channel if it remains uncluttered.
Prohibited
Placing this function in violates the elemental balance — reversing the gradient — heavy ne and light sw — is the most severe vastu defect (vastu vipareetat).
Sub-Rules
- NE-SW diagonal has correct gradient (light NE → heavy SW)▲ Major
- NE-SW gradient is reversed (heavy NE, light SW)▼ Critical
- NE corner cut or missing from the plan▼ Major
- Unobstructed view along the NE-SW diagonal▲ Moderate

The NE-SW diagonal is the primary energy axis — the Vastu Rekhā. The gradient flows from light/open at NE (divine, water) to heavy/solid at SW (earth, stability). This axis is the dwelling's spine: reverse it and the structure fails energetically. Severing either end (NE or SW cut) is among the most severe defects.
Common Violations
NE-SW gradient reversed — heavy NE, light SW
Traditional consequence: Vastu Vipareetat — the inverted dwelling. The cosmic order is upside-down. All aspects of life suffer: finances, health, relationships, and spiritual growth. This is considered the root cause of all other Vastu defects.
NE corner cut or missing
Traditional consequence: Ishaan Khandana — the most severe plot defect. The divine entry point is severed. Spiritual, financial, and health obstructions affect all occupants. This is irreversible by remedies alone.
SW corner cut or missing
Traditional consequence: Nairutya Khandana — the stability anchor is amputated. The household loses authority, grounding, and long-term security. The foundation of the dwelling's energy structure is compromised.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition connects the NE-SW axis to the Sushumna Nadi of the chakra system — the dwelling's spiritual spine.
Wada physical slope along the diagonal — NE courtyard lowest, SW suite highest.
Tamil Sthapati measures this diagonal first — it is the primary diagnostic line.
Kakatiya fort layout as the monumental expression of the NE-SW gradient.
Jain spiritual interpretation — the diagonal as the path from material attachment to spiritual liberation.
Nalukettu courtyard design organized around this diagonal axis.
Haveli prosperity axis — NE entrance to SW Shreshti's suite.
Bengali Pratham Pariksha — the diagonal gradient is the first-checked parameter.
Lingaraj Temple and Konark express this diagonal at the grandest architectural scale.
Standard Vedic interpretation — adapted through the Sikh principles of Hukam and Kirat Karni
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Consult a qualified Vastu consultant for professional directional assessment
Modern VastuApply elemental corrections using appropriate colors, materials, and symbolic objects
Modern VastuRestore the NE-SW gradient: move heavy items from NE to SW, declutter the NE, and add mass to the SW
If the NE corner is cut, extend it symbolically with a mirror on the NE wall to create visual depth, or place a water feature at the NE point
Open the NE and add weight to the SW simultaneously — maximizing the gradient is more important than correcting either end alone
Place a Vastu Yantra at the center of the dwelling to energize the diagonal axis from its midpoint
Remedies from other traditions
Place a Vastu Yantra in the affected zone to harmonize directional energies
Vedic VastuPerform Vastu Shanti Homa to ritually correct the elemental imbalance
Install a Tulsi Vrindavan near the affected zone per Maharashtrian Wada tradition
HemadpanthiRecite Ganesh Atharvashirsha to invoke obstacle-removal before correction
Classical Sources
“The dwelling's energy flows from the head of the Vastu Purusha in the Ishaan to his feet in the Nairutya. This great diagonal is the Prana Sutra — the life thread of the structure. Sever it and the dwelling falls lifeless; honor it and it breathes with prosperity.”
“The Vastu Rekhā runs from Ishaan to Nairutya — this is the axis upon which all energy organizes. The mandala balances on this diagonal: light ascending from the NE, heavy descending to the SW. Every room, wall, and opening must respect this primary gradient.”
“The corner from Ishaan to Nairutya forms the Urdhva-Adhah Rekhā — the ascending-descending line. The Ishaan end rises toward the divine; the Nairutya end descends into the earth. This is the axis of transformation — from spirit to matter, from light to weight.”
“Vishvakarma teaches: the Ishaan-Nairutya Rekhā is the dwelling's spine. As the human spine connects the crown chakra to the root chakra, this diagonal connects the divine head to the earthly feet. The entire Vastu mandala organizes around this axis.”
“The Vastu Rekhā from Ishaan to Nairutya is the most sacred line in architecture. The Ratnakara warns: every building succeeds or fails along this diagonal. Measure the weight, height, openness, and light at both ends — the Ishaan must be lighter, lower, more open than the Nairutya in every measure.”

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