How NineFengShui Works for Home Feng Shui
What goes into the analysis
NineFengShui does not guess from one photo or one room. It reads a small set of home feng shui floor plan inputs and combines them into one report.
The main inputs are:
- the 3x3 nine-grid layout
- which cells are full, partial, extended, or outside the home
- the home's orientation
- room placement inside each palace
- who sleeps in which room, when member data is provided
- yearly timing such as Flying Stars
The point is not to recreate your floor plan like CAD. The point is to capture the structural signals the system actually uses.
What this method is especially useful for
This page is most useful when the real question is one of these:
- how to read a bagua map on a floor plan without switching methods halfway
- how the system decides whether the center of the home is actually pressured
- how room placement, split rooms, and missing corners turn into report confidence
- why a floor-plan check and a report example are different pages with different jobs
If you need the practical overlay first, go to the Bagua Map on Floor Plan guide or the Feng Shui Floor Plan Checker. If you want to see the output before mapping your home, open the Feng Shui Report Example.
How the logic works
The report is built in layers.
1. Structure first
The system checks the shape, the center, missing or extended sectors, and which rooms occupy each palace.
2. Function next
It then looks at what each room is doing in that position. A toilet, kitchen, bedroom, entrance, or unused area does not carry the same meaning in the same palace.
3. Family context when available
If you add household members, the report compares sleeping positions and home structure with Day Master tendencies and annual timing.
4. Timing last
Annual Flying Stars do not replace the structure. They sit on top of it and change which sectors are easier to use or more sensitive this year and next year.
What possible and certain mean
NineFengShui separates direct conclusions from provisional ones.
Certain
A note is certain when the mapped layout already gives enough evidence. This usually comes from clear room placement, clear palace occupation, or direct member-to-room information.
Possible
A note is possible when the pattern looks likely from the layout, but still depends on real-world details such as wall sharing, exact openings, furniture depth, or which side of a split room dominates.
You should treat possible as a verification prompt, not as an automatic order.
Why privacy-first mapping matters
The floor-plan checker is designed to work without uploading your floor plan image.
You map the outline and the room placement onto the nine-grid, and the system reads that structured layout instead of storing a full architectural drawing.
This keeps the checker lightweight, faster to use, and easier to audit.
What the free and full reports output
Free Assessment Report
The free report is a first-pass diagnosis. It shows:
- the home type
- the most critical issue
- a lighter preview of timing and family linkage
- enough context to decide whether deeper action is needed
Full Remedy Report
The full report is the execution layer. It adds:
- the full prioritized issue list
- room-by-room and palace-by-palace remedy guidance
- deeper timing and hidden-risk interpretation
- PDF export and follow-up AI guidance on the same report
What the report is good for
NineFengShui is strongest when you want to:
- check whether a layout concern is structurally real
- compare several possible problems without guessing blindly
- decide which issue deserves action first
- turn a vague feng shui concern into a concrete checklist
What it does not replace
The report does not replace site visits, renovation drawings, or detailed measurement work. It gives a structured decision layer so you know what deserves attention before you spend time or money.
