Window Guide · Pune
South-East-facing Pooja Room
South-East is not the traditional Vastu placement for a pooja room, but the room remains usable. Window design + simple remedies neutralise the directional bias.
The recommendation
These figures are advisory — drawn from IS 3792 (Temperate zone) and Vastu Shastra teaching tradition. An architect should adapt them to your plot's exact bearing, plinth height and facade design.
Why this direction for a pooja room?
A pooja room window's job is to bring morning light to the deity at dawn — small, high-sill, and on the NE wall ideally. The window should never face directly at the deity but rather light the side wall, creating soft fill light during morning aarti.
The fire deity. Cooking, transformation, the hearth's natural home.
Vastu's ideal placement for a pooja room is NE. South-East is outside the traditional band, though with simple remedies the room works well.
Why Pune's climate matters
Pune is in the Temperate climate zone (Cwb, Cfb per the Köppen scale; Temperate per NBC 2016). Summer temperatures: 25-35°C, winters: 12-22°C. Rainfall: 500-1500 mm/year. Humidity: 40-75%.
A Bangalore wall does not need to be a Jaipur wall. Most builders copy the same envelope anyway and the home pays the bill.
For a south-east face in this climate, the recommendation is a sliding 2t window with clear glazing and a sill at 3' — calibrated for mild year-round temperatures with comfortable airflow.
Common mistakes
- Pooja shelf placed against a toilet's plumbing wall
- No window — reliance on artificial light only
- Windows opening onto a common-area corridor instead of fresh air
- Treating South-East placement as a hard error — it's not. The room remains usable; a small Vastu remedy (heavy furniture on the NE wall, mirror placement away from the bed) handles the directional refinement.