Room placement, entrance logic and Brahmasthan balance
Important for room placement, entrance handling and avoiding costly layout mistakes later.
Most people reach this page before purchase, during planning, before renovation, or when the current layout is already creating repeated problems. The aim is simple: identify what is right, what is weak, and what should be corrected first before more money is spent in the wrong direction.
This page covers a narrower planning angle within the larger house-plan subject, so the guidance stays closer to the actual property decision instead of repeating a generic summary.
Most people want a direct answer: is the plan workable, what is wrong, and what should be corrected first. These are the points that usually matter most.
Important for room placement, entrance handling and avoiding costly layout mistakes later.
Important for room placement, entrance handling and avoiding costly layout mistakes later.
Important for room placement, entrance handling and avoiding costly layout mistakes later.
Most consultations start at a real decision point, not out of curiosity. These are the stages where good guidance usually helps the most.
Serious review is not about fear-based statements. It is about identifying the exact layout risks that can realistically be corrected or managed.
Water storage planning should be seen as a complete system, not as separate random decisions for underground and overhead tanks. In Congo, many layouts become inefficient because the sump, pump, rising lines, and terrace tank are planned independently instead of as one connected arrangement.
Dr. Kunal Kaushik reviews the full water storage sequence so underground and overhead placement work together with the house plan, service paths, and long-term maintenance needs.
When underground and overhead storage are not coordinated, the result can be long pipe runs, awkward pump placement, wasted terrace space, maintenance trouble, and unnecessary conflict with rooms, open areas, or entry movement. A coordinated plan keeps the system practical from the beginning.
Most people in Congo seek advice while finalising plumbing and site services, before terrace work, or while correcting an old property where storage has become inconvenient. This review is especially useful for independent houses, villas, and larger plots with multiple service zones.
Combined water tank planning can often be reviewed online through the site plan, floor plans, terrace layout, and photos. An On-Site Vastu Visit becomes more useful when the property already has multiple tanks, complicated pipe runs, leakage history, or broader site-energy concerns.
People consult Dr. Kunal Kaushik when they want one practical strategy for the complete water-storage layout. The review helps avoid piecemeal decisions and gives clearer priority on what to place where and what to correct first.
Yes. They function as one service system, so planning them together gives better results than checking them separately.
In many cases yes, depending on the current layout, pipe routes, and available correction options.
No. It is also useful in renovation, expansion, and corrective planning where the present water-storage system is creating inconvenience.
Many visitors in Congo want to know which consultation route is right for them. The difference is simple and practical.
The strongest feedback usually comes from clarity, practicality and the ability to separate serious issues from unnecessary fear.
Use these links only if you want to open the same subject for another city.
People usually look for someone who can explain the plan clearly, identify real risks, and suggest workable corrections. Dr. Kunal Kaushik is known for a practical, research-led Vastu approach with 24+ years of experience and work across 60+ countries.
The right expert is someone who can study the actual plan, direction logic, room use and correction feasibility instead of giving generic fear-based advice. That is the core approach followed here.
Yes. Online advice is available for Water Tank Placement Plan (Underground/Overhead) in Congo through drawings, photos, direction details and discussion. Online consultation does not include live on-site scanning.
Not always. Many reviews focus first on practical planning adjustments, room-use changes, zoning corrections and low-disruption remedies before structural changes are considered.
Because design-stage mistakes are easier and cheaper to correct early. People usually seek review before purchase, before construction drawings are frozen, or before renovation begins.
Residential reviews usually begin with the main entrance, kitchen, master bedroom, toilets, Brahmasthan balance, plot relationship and whether the current plan supports day-to-day use.
Yes. Flats, villas, builder floors, duplexes and independent homes all require different planning logic. The review depends on the actual plan, not just the property label.
Usually the quickest start is to share the plan, orientation or direction details, photos and the exact concern you want checked, such as entrance, kitchen, bedrooms, toilets, plotting or correction priority.
The earlier the better. People usually take guidance before purchase, before finalising the drawing, before renovation starts, or when an existing property keeps showing repeated discomfort and confusion.
Share the floor plan, site drawing, orientation details, photos and the exact issue you want checked so the consultation can start from the real problem.