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Go with the Flow
Feng Shui Test your Property

Howard Choy of Feng Shui Architects Pty Ltd provides this 10-point checklist. Does your new investment meet the feng shui test?

Feng (wind) shui (water) is about the flow and containment of chi (energy) in the environment. According to the Chinese, wind carries chi and water contains it, so the right mix of both allows the balanced energy to benefit the occupants. Feng shui principles make good design sense, and buildings which conform with feng shui enjoy a much wider market among Asians and an increasing number of Australians.

Good chi is called "sheng chi" (vital energy) while bad chi is called "sha chi" (destructive energy). It can be caused by glaring lights, sharp noises, charged emotions, pointed objects and lack of privacy. So avoid property facing the road in a T junction or the end of a cul de sac, where traffic points towards it. Also avoid properties in noisy areas or where the rooms are invaded by glaring light from the sun or headlights. Avoid properties which are overshadowed or overlooked by taller buildings nearby. Avoid properties close to places filled with emotion and noise, such as churches, bars and brothels, airports and under flight paths, railway lines or highways. Avoid properties close to pointed objects - such objects are bad omens in feng shui.

Feng Shui, also known as Kan Yu, is part of the mysterious
culture of China that deals with our living environment.

To be in the right place, at the right time, doing the right thing and being in harmony with Nature is what we want to achieve in Feng Shui.

Good Feng Shui requires us to be close to the water and sheltered from the wind and to take advantage of the life giving Sheng Qi, when yin and yang forces are balanced.

The aim of Feng Shui Architecture is to gather the Qi so we can have good feelings about our environment and affection for each other. When we feel good at home and at work, we will be happy, healthy, and prosperous.

 

The ideal building, from a feng shui point of view, is like a comfortable arm chair, beautifully positioned in a sunny garden. To find a property with sheng chi, consider the following:

1. The building should be slightly elevated - on the high side of the street.

2. The back of the building should be protected, by trees, another building, or high ground behind.

3. It should also be protected slightly on the sides, by being nestled into the landscape instead of perched on top of it.

4. It should have an open and uncluttered area in the front, on the sunny side of the building.

5. To the Chinese, water represents wealth. If there is no open water in sight, a water feature in the front and the back will do as well.

6. The front door lets the energy into the building. It has to be visible, welcoming and friendly, and appropriate in size to the building. Avoid having the garage, a tree, lamp post or power pole too close to the front door, especially if it obscures or dominates the door.

7. There should be a transition space (lobby or hall) between the front door and the rest of the building. This filters and softens the harsher outside chi making it suitable for inside.

8. Outlook is important. The living area and kitchen should look onto open space with plants and water in the background.

9. Kitchens and bathrooms should be on the edges of the building. The kitchen and family area can be the heart of the home. The kitchen should not be near the front door, neither should bathrooms and toilets.

10. Your building should have a regular shape, but perfect shapes, such as circles and hexagons focus the energy in one spot. This is fine for churches and meditation spaces, but not such a good idea for the activities of a home.

When the feng shui is right, the property, says Choy, is balanced and harmonious. Properties which make people feel secure and comfortable, are more likely to attract tenants. Good feng shui makes economic sense.

by Howard Choy

Feng Shui Architects Pty Ltd (t/a Howard Choy & Associates) is an architectural firm with Howard Choy as Director and Principal Architect. While domestic scale architecture predominates our work, we have been heavily involved in several high-profile urban scale projects. These include Haymarket Precinct Urban Redevelopment, the Chinese Community Centre (Haymarket), and the Sydney Chinese Garden at Darling Harbour.

Website: www.feng-shui-architects.com

Feng Shui College of Sydney is an educational part of the practice. We aim to make Feng Shui accessible to the general public and to bring Feng Shui and architecture together, including all areas of environmental design. Howard teaches not only in Sydney, Australia but has students in Canada, Chile, Denmark, England, Finland, Germany, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States.

Howard Choy [B Sc (Arch), B Arch], Director and Principal Architect of Feng Shui Architects, is a qualified and practicing architect. He is a graduate in architecture of University of NSW. Howard was born in China and migrated to Australia
at an early age. He has managed to keep his language and culture intact through his involvement with Feng Shui, Tai Chi and Qigong. Feng Shui provides the perfect vehicle for him to combine his passion for Chinese cultural heritage with his professional practice. Howard is a foundation vice-president of the Feng Shui Society of Australia.

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