
Retaining Wall on S/W
Retaining walls on sloped plots should be placed on the S/W side to preserve the
Local term: Retaining wall, gabion basket, reinforced earth, geogrid, slope stabilization
Modern geotechnical engineering and Vastu align on retaining wall placement. S/W retaining walls on sloped plots maintain the elevation gradient that both disciplines favour — heavy/high in the SW, light/low in the NE. Proper drainage behind retaining walls is essential to prevent hydrostatic pressure buildup.
Source: All classical texts; geotechnical engineering
Unique: Geotechnical engineering and Vastu fully aligned on S/W retaining wall placement.
Retaining Wall on S/W
Architectural diagram for Retaining Wall on S/W
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
S, SW, W
S/W retaining wall on sloped plots, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
all
All-side retaining with thicker S/W.
Prohibited
NE, N, E
NE-only retaining wall reverses elevation gradient.
Sub-Rules
- Retaining wall is built on S/W side maintaining natural elevation gradient▲ Moderate
- Retaining wall only on NE side artificially raising NE terrain▼ Moderate

Retaining walls on sloped plots should be placed on the S/W side to preserve the earth element's concentration in the stability quarter. A S/W retaining wall artificially maintains the natural elevation gradient that Vastu prescribes — heavy and high in the SW, low and light in the NE. An NE-only retaining wall reverses this gradient by construction.
Common Violations
Retaining wall only on NE side reversing elevation gradient
Traditional consequence: Artificial Bhumi Viparita (reversed earth). The NE is raised by construction while the SW drops away. The dwelling's stability zone loses its earthen anchor. Financial and health instability for occupants.
No retaining wall on S/W side of sloping plot
Traditional consequence: Gradual loss of earth mass from the stability quarter. Over seasons, erosion removes soil from S/W, increasing the slope reversal. The dwelling's earth foundation literally slides away from underneath.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic Dharana Bhitti — retaining wall as cosmic order restoration.
Deccan plateau terrain — S/W retaining walls critical on Pune hills.
Tamil Thaduppu Mathil — specific retaining wall placement rules for sloped Nilam.
Kakatiya megalithic retaining walls — monumental precedent — distinctive to Kakatiya practice per the Samarangana Sutradhara and Kakatiya inscriptions.
Jain Bhumi Bandhana — binding the earth element to the property.
Kerala laterite retaining walls — naturally suited to S/W earth retention.
Jain Prithvi Sthirata — earth stabilization through retaining structures.
Bengali hill architecture — Darjeeling S/W retaining wall tradition.
Kalinga rock-cut retaining structures — monumental earth retention.
Punjab foothill sites — S/W retaining walls for Vastu on mountain slopes.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Masonry retaining wall: ₹25,000-1,50,000. Terracing: ₹50,000-3,00,000. Planting: ₹5,000-25,000.
Modern VastuConstruct a retaining wall along the S/W boundary of the plot to arrest soil loss and maintain the elevation gradient — use reinforced masonry or gabion baskets
Terrace the plot with stepped retaining walls that maintain overall S/W-high-to-NE-low gradient — consult a geotechnical engineer for proper drainage behind walls
Plant deep-rooted trees and ground cover on the S/W slope to stabilize soil naturally — vetiver grass, bamboo, or banyan roots act as natural retaining structures
If NE retaining wall exists but S/W does not, add fill material and compact soil on the S/W side to gradually raise the terrain — combined with a retaining wall for permanence
Remedies from other traditions
Stone retaining wall on S/W boundary. Bhumi Puja at wall foundation.
Vedic VastuStone retaining wall. Deep-root planting on S/W slope.
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“Where the Bhumi slopes against the prescribed gradient, the Sthapati shall erect a Dharana Bhitti (retaining wall) upon the Dakshina-Paschima boundary to hold the earth in its rightful place. The soil must remain heavy at the Nairitya quarter even if nature has made it otherwise.”
“Varahamihira instructs: when the site slopes from the auspicious SW toward the NE, the builder must arrest the flow of earth on the Dakshina edge with a strong wall of stone. The earth that departs from the Nairitya carries the dwelling's stability with it.”
“On a sloping Nilam (site) where the Therkku (south) falls away, the Thaduppu Mathil (retaining wall) shall be erected along the Therkku and Merkku edges to preserve the height of the heavy quarter. Without this, the dwelling stands on a tilted Bhumi that drains stability.”
“Vishvakarma declares: the Dharana Bhitti placed at the Dakshina boundary is a shield of earth. It keeps the Prithvi Tattva concentrated in the Nairitya zone. Without the retaining wall, the stability element rolls downhill and departs.”
“The Sutradhara advises: where nature has inclined the Bhumi so that the Dakshina quarter loses its earthen mass, the architect must build a Dharana Prachira upon that edge. It is not mere engineering but a restoration of cosmic order upon the plot.”

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