Residential6 min read
Missing Corners in Floor Plans: Should You Worry?
Tell structural gaps from small rooms before buying cures
You may read that a missing northwest hurts the father or a missing southeast hurts wealth. These ideas come from bagua correspondences and can be useful references, but they should not override siting, annual stars, and how you actually use the space.
How to tell if it counts
- Shape: the floor plan clearly indents on one side.
- Use: that sector is dark, cluttered, or unused for years.
- Context: modern flats often have balconies and irregular facades—look at the whole picture.
Key takeaways
- Stand at the center, use a compass for eight directions, then see which sector is clearly recessed.
- Common fixes: keep that sector bright, clean, and used; use matching colors and materials—not piles of charms.
- A small room in one sector is not always a serious missing corner; judge the whole layout.
Sources & references
Key points are summarized from the works and public references below, reflecting mainstream feng shui, fate-chart, and divination teachings for beginners—not personal invention. Apply ideas with judgment.
- ReferenceBagua (Wikipedia)
Eight trigrams
Classical residential siting text
- ReferenceFeng shui (Wikipedia)
Overview article