30x40 House Plan | 4 Floor North Facing Design
A G+3 north-facing home on a 30×40 plot — four floors of liveable space, Vastu-compliant layout, and a built-in thermal advantage that compounds with every floor you add
If you own a 30×40 north facing plot and want to build four floors, you are sitting on one of the most structurally and climatically efficient plot-direction combinations in Indian residential construction. A 30×40 house plan 4 floor north facing gives you four simultaneous advantages: a Vastu-prime entrance on the auspicious Kubera axis, consistent indirect light across all north-facing rooms, a 40-ft depth that enables genuine cross-ventilation at every level, and a 30-ft frontage wide enough to accommodate a clean five-column structural frame without expensive long-span beams.
This guide covers everything — floor plans with real room dimensions, Vastu grid placements, 3D elevation notes, structural requirements for G+3, and a construction cost estimate calibrated to 2026 Bengaluru and Hyderabad market rates. All design work referenced here is produced by Ongrid's COA-certified in-house architects.
Why a 30×40 North Facing Plot Is Ideal for 4 Floors
Not every plot-direction combination scales cleanly to G+3. A 30×40 north-facing plot does — for two structural and two environmental reasons.
Structural reasons: The 30-ft frontage divides into five columns at 6-ft bays along the east-west axis. The 40-ft depth runs a clean three-bay grid — typically 12+10+12 ft or 14+12+12 ft. That 5×3 frame gives you 15 column positions per floor, which is exactly right for G+3 without oversizing spans or adding costly transfer beams. The geometry fits naturally.
Environmental reasons: The north face of the building receives no direct sunlight at any time of year in India. The northern sky is the most consistent and coolest light source — delivering diffuse daylight without glare or solar heat gain. Meanwhile, the 40-ft depth from north to south creates a thermal gradient: the north side stays cooler, while the south rear picks up morning and afternoon sun, driving stack-effect ventilation upward and outward. This happens passively on all four floors simultaneously.
Combine these two effects — zero solar gain on the main façade, active cross-ventilation through the 40-ft depth — and you have a thermal dividend that reduces annual AC electricity costs by an estimated 18–24% compared to a west-facing equivalent. Across four floors, that is a meaningful recurring saving.
Sun path analysis: the north-facing primary façade receives only diffuse sky light year-round. The south wall at the rear of the 40-ft depth captures morning and afternoon solar gain — driving stack-effect cross-ventilation upward through the building on all floors.
The North Thermal Stack — Your Built-In Cooling Engine
Here is the core technical insight behind this 30×40 house plan 4 floor north facing design. On a north-facing 30×40 plot, the entire four-floor building functions as a thermal stack.
Cooler north air enters through the primary façade openings at every floor level. As it travels the 40-ft depth southward, it warms slightly. That warmer air rises and exits through south-facing service windows, the kitchen exhaust duct, and the open stairwell shaft. This chimney effect is self-sustaining whenever outside temperatures exceed interior temperatures — roughly 200–220 days per year in Bengaluru and Hyderabad.
To maximise the effect, this design deliberately places:
- Staircase on the east interior wall — preserving the full north and south faces for ventilation openings at all four levels
- Kitchen and utility areas at the south-east and south-west — where cooking exhaust heat reinforces the stack effect rather than fighting it
- Primary bedrooms and living rooms on the north and west sides — benefiting from cooler north air intake and avoiding afternoon western glare
This passive cooling strategy is baked into the building's geometry. No additional cost. No mechanical system. Just physics working in your favour.
For more on passive cooling strategies in Indian homes, the Ongrid sustainable design blog covers cross-ventilation, thermal mass, and roof garden techniques across different climates and plot orientations.
Floor-by-Floor Breakdown — G+3 Designed for North
Total built-up area across all four floors is approximately 3,100 sq ft, including common areas, staircases, and balconies. Each floor is purpose-designed: the ground floor for family living and parking, the first floor for primary family bedrooms, the second floor as an optionally independent rental or extended-family unit, and the third floor as a penthouse-level suite.
Ground Floor (G) — Family Living + Two-Car Parking
Ground floor plan: two-car parking behind the north setback, a central living-dining zone, Vastu-compliant kitchen in the south-east, pooja room in the north-east, and master bedroom in the south-west
The ground floor embeds all Vastu-critical placements while keeping daily family movement logical and unobstructed.
| Space | Dimensions | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Covered parking | 9×18 ft | Two cars, north side behind setback |
| Living room | 13×12 ft | North-facing, large glazed unit |
| Dining area | 10×10 ft | Central, adjacent to kitchen |
| Kitchen | 9×8 ft | South-east — Vastu Agni kona |
| Pooja room | 4×5 ft | North-east — Vastu Ishanya |
| Master bedroom | 13×11 ft | South-west — Vastu Pitru |
| Master bathroom | 5×8 ft | Attached, south side |
| Common toilet | 4×6 ft | North-west, near entrance |
| Staircase | 4×10 ft | East interior wall |
Approximate built-up area (excluding parking canopy): 760 sq ft
The living room's north-facing glazed unit draws cool diffuse light into the main social space without glare or summer heat gain. The kitchen's south-east placement aligns with Vastu (Agni — fire direction) and practical thermal logic: morning sun on the kitchen side supports early-day cooking warmth, and kitchen exhaust flows south, reinforcing the thermal stack effect.
First Floor — Primary Family Bedrooms
First floor plan: three bedrooms with a south-west master suite, two attached bathrooms, a north-facing family lounge, and a cantilevered north balcony
| Space | Dimensions | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Master bedroom | 13×12 ft | South-west, cross-ventilated |
| Bedroom 2 | 11×11 ft | North-west, opens to balcony |
| Bedroom 3 | 10×10 ft | South-east |
| Bathroom 1 (attached) | 5×8 ft | With master bedroom |
| Bathroom 2 (attached) | 5×7 ft | With Bedroom 2 |
| Family lounge | 12×10 ft | North side, connects to balcony |
| North balcony | 9×4 ft | Cantilevered, north-facing |
| Staircase landing | 4×6 ft | East wall |
Approximate built-up area: 790 sq ft
The north balcony at this level is the most-used outdoor space in the home. It acts as a thermal buffer — shading the rooms below it from direct sun while giving the first-floor bedrooms a protected outdoor sitting area. Because it faces north, it remains usable year-round in Bengaluru without shade cloth or ceiling fans.
Second Floor — Extended Family or Independent Rental Unit
Second floor plan: two bedrooms, a north-east study room, compact kitchenette, utility balcony to the south, and a north sit-out — configurable as a self-contained rental unit with separate metering
The second floor is designed to be optionally independent. A lockable door at the staircase landing, a separate electrical meter, and a self-contained bathroom and kitchenette are designed in from the start — not retrofitted later.
| Space | Dimensions | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bedroom 1 | 13×12 ft | South-west |
| Bedroom 2 | 11×10 ft | North-facing |
| Study / work room | 9×8 ft | North-east — Vastu Ishanya |
| Common bathroom | 5×8 ft | Central |
| Kitchenette | 7×6 ft | South-east |
| Utility balcony | 5×4 ft | South side, drying area |
| North balcony | 9×4 ft | Sit-out and planting area |
Approximate built-up area: 750 sq ft
In Bengaluru's HSR Layout, Whitefield, or Electronic City, a self-contained 2BHK on an upper floor of a G+3 building commands ₹18,000–₹28,000/month. The study room in the north-east corner is a deliberate Vastu choice: the Ishanya zone is considered the most conducive direction for learning and intellectual work — ideal for a home office or children's study.
Third Floor — Penthouse Suite + Rooftop Living
Third floor plan: a 14×12 ft penthouse master bedroom with premium attached bath, a north open terrace with landscaping, and a south utility terrace — the signature level of the G+3 build
| Space | Dimensions | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Penthouse bedroom | 14×12 ft | North-west, panoramic views |
| Attached bathroom | 6×8 ft | Premium fitting |
| Sitting room | 12×10 ft | North-facing open plan |
| Kitchenette | 7×6 ft | South-east |
| North open terrace | 12×8 ft | Landscaped sit-out |
| South utility terrace | 10×6 ft | Drying and service |
| Staircase head | 4×6 ft | — |
Approximate built-up area (including covered terrace areas): 800 sq ft
The third-floor penthouse concept is increasingly popular in Bengaluru and Hyderabad for owner-occupied top-floor living with city views. The north-facing open terrace is usable as an evening sit-out for more months of the year than a west or south terrace: there is no direct sun exposure, and the north sky remains luminous and cool well into the evening during summer months.
Vastu Compliance for a North-Facing 30×40 Home
A north-facing plot is one of the most naturally Vastu-aligned configurations in Indian residential design. North is ruled by Kubera — the deity of wealth, abundance, and financial prosperity. Every floor of this G+3 home maintains the core Vastu placements.
Vastu Purush Mandala applied to the 30×40 north-facing plot: nine energy zones mapped to room types and maintained consistently across all four floors
| Vastu Zone | Direction | Room Placed | Principle |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kubera (wealth) | North | Main entrance, living room | Most auspicious entry — prosperity axis |
| Ishanya (divine light) | North-East | Pooja room (G), study rooms (upper) | Learning, clarity, spiritual energy |
| Agni (fire) | South-East | Kitchen on every floor | Cooking and nourishment — fire direction |
| Pitru (stability) | South-West | Master bedrooms, all floors | Grounding, rest, long-term stability |
| Vayu (movement) | North-West | Common toilet, guest spaces | Transitional, movement-oriented activities |
| Brahma (centre) | Central | Stairwell void | Open and unobstructed — central energy |
The main entrance door is positioned on the second pada from the north-east along the north face. In Vastu Shastra, this pada falls within the Devata range — the most auspicious sub-zone of the Kubera direction, associated with divine grace and prosperity entering the home.
For a complete guide to Vastu-compliant home planning from site selection through room placement, the Ongrid beginner's guide to home building is a strong starting resource.
3D Elevation & Design Highlights
The elevation for this 30×40 4-floor north facing house plan uses a contemporary Indian register — clean horizontal banding, alternating balcony projection and recession, and a textured base course — without ornate decoration.
Elevation detail: balconies on the first and third floors project 3 ft; second floor and parapet are recessed. Natural stone cladding anchors the base. Dark anodised aluminium frames keep the upper facade clean and low-maintenance.
Key design decisions in the elevation:
- Staggered balcony depth: First and third-floor balconies project 3 ft beyond the building line. Second-floor and parapet are recessed. This rhythm creates natural self-shading on the north face and breaks the visual weight of four identical stacked floors.
- Stone base course: A 3-ft natural stone cladding band at ground level anchors the building visually and protects the base from water splash during monsoon.
- Linear horizontal louvers at the first-floor balcony parapet: privacy for the bedroom behind it with full north ventilation maintained through the louver gaps.
- Flush dark-anodised aluminium window frames: Low-maintenance, clean, and visually recessive against the light-coloured plaster above the base course.
- Planted trough on the north parapet: A low-cost green screen that reduces urban heat island effect at the top level and adds softness to the roofline profile.
Explore 200+ modern house elevation designs on Ongrid for visual inspiration. Or browse three-storey home design collections if you want to compare the G+2 variant side by side before committing to four floors.
Construction Cost Estimate — 30×40 House Plan 4 Floor North Facing
Total built-up area across all four floors is approximately 3,100 sq ft. Construction costs vary by city, specification level, soil condition, and contractor quality. The table below is calibrated to 2026 Bengaluru and Hyderabad market rates.
Cost split by trade: civil structure (foundation, columns, slabs) accounts for ~47%. Finishing and MEP together ~44%. External works — driveway, boundary wall, landscaping — account for the balance.
| Specification Tier | Rate per Sq Ft | Total Construction Cost | Full Project Cost (incl. design + approvals) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 3 — Economy | ₹1,200–₹2,000/sq ft | ₹37L–₹62L | ₹42L–₹70L |
| Tier 2 — Standard | ₹1,500–₹2,500/sq ft | ₹46L–₹77L | ₹53L–₹87L |
| Tier 1 — Premium | ₹2,000–₹3,500/sq ft | ₹62L–₹1.08 Cr | ₹71L–₹1.22 Cr |
G+3 structural premium: A four-floor structure requires a deeper foundation — typically a raft or pile foundation in BDA/BBMP zones with expansive or weak soil. Budget an additional ₹2.5L–₹4.5L over a G+1 equivalent for foundation upgrades. This is a one-time fixed cost spread across all four floors.
Design cost: Ongrid's full working drawing set — architectural, structural, plumbing, and electrical — for a G+3 home on a 30×40 plot starts from ₹40,000–₹80,000 depending on service tier. See the Ongrid pricing page for current rates.
Use the Ongrid home construction cost calculator to generate a more precise estimate for your specific city, soil type, and finish preferences.
Structural Notes — Column Grid & Load Path for G+3
A 30×40 house plan 4 floor north facing has specific structural requirements that differ from a G+1 or G+2 design. Here are the key decisions your structural engineer will focus on.
Column grid: The 30-ft frontage places five columns at 6-ft centres along the east-west axis. The 40-ft depth runs a three-bay grid — 12+10+12 ft or 14+12+12 ft. The 5×3 frame gives 15 column positions per floor, which is appropriate for G+3 without over-designing the spans.
Slab thickness: Standard 5-inch slabs work for G+1 and G+2. For G+3, most Bengaluru structural engineers specify 5.5–6 inch flat slabs with additional bottom reinforcement at corner and edge spans. This adds approximately ₹1.8L–₹3.2L to the slab cost but is non-negotiable for safety at four floors.
Column sizing: Typical sections range from 230×450 mm at the lower floors to 230×300 mm at the top floor. Concrete grade M25 is standard; M30 is recommended for seismic zone II and III sites — which covers most of Karnataka and Telangana.
Staircase structure: The 4×10 ft staircase with a half-landing at each floor requires a structurally independent landing slab and a dedicated staircase beam. Budget ₹1.5L–₹2L for the complete four-floor staircase structure including handrail.
For detailed guidance on foundation types, slab design, and selecting a contractor for multi-floor builds, the Ongrid home building guide covers these topics comprehensively.
Get Your Personalised 30×40 4-Floor North Facing Plan
This design is available as a fully customised working drawing set — adapted to your plot's specific dimensions, setback requirements, and your city's building bylaws.
The north-facing first-floor balcony lounge — naturally cool, glare-free, and usable year-round without mechanical cooling. One of the most practical advantages of north orientation on a G+3 build.
- Book a consultation with an Ongrid architect — ₹999 for a 45-minute session with a COA-licensed architect who will review your plot, discuss modifications, and walk through design options
- HomeBlueprints Advance Plus — full working drawing set with architectural, structural, plumbing, and electrical drawings
- Browse complete set home plans — ready-to-use plans for 30×40 and similar plot sizes, available immediately
Frequently Asked Questions
How many bedrooms can a 30×40 4-floor north facing house have?
A well-designed 30×40 house plan 4 floor north facing can accommodate 7–9 bedrooms across the G+3 floors. A typical configuration is one master bedroom on the ground floor, three bedrooms on the first floor, two on the second floor, and one penthouse-style bedroom on the third — totalling 7 bedrooms. Adding a study or servant quarter on any floor can push the count to 8–9. This makes G+3 on a 30×40 plot well-suited for large joint families or owner-and-rental mixed use.
Is a north facing 30×40 plot good for Vastu in a 4-floor house?
Yes — north is one of the strongest directions for a multi-floor home. The north direction is ruled by Kubera, the deity of wealth and prosperity, making the north-facing main entrance highly auspicious. For G+3 builds, the core Vastu placements hold consistently across every floor: north-east for pooja rooms and study spaces, south-west for master bedrooms, south-east for kitchens and kitchenettes, and the building's centre kept open via the stairwell void. The four-floor height does not compromise Vastu integrity.
What is the total built-up area of a 30×40 G+3 north facing house?
Total built-up area across all four floors — including staircase, balconies, and utility areas — is approximately 3,000–3,200 sq ft. Individual floor plates range from 750–800 sq ft per floor after setbacks and coverage limits. FAR (Floor Area Ratio) regulations in Bengaluru allow 1.75–2.5 times the plot area depending on road width. On a 1,200 sq ft plot with a 15-ft road, FAR 2.5 permits up to 3,000 sq ft — closely matched by this design.
What approvals are needed to build a 4-floor house on a 30×40 plot in Bengaluru?
For a G+3 home in BBMP limits, you need: BBMP building plan sanction (via the Sakala/BBMP online portal), a structural stability certificate from a licensed structural engineer, and a completion certificate after construction. In BDA-approved layouts, BDA plan approval replaces BBMP sanction. Road width is the binding constraint — a minimum 15-ft road is typically required to unlock FAR 2.5 for a four-floor build. Ongrid's legal paperwork guide has a full pre-construction checklist.
How much does a 30×40 G+3 north facing house cost to build in 2026?
In Bengaluru and Hyderabad (2026), the total project cost for a G+3 north-facing home on a 30×40 plot ranges from approximately ₹42L at economy specifications to ₹1.22 Cr at premium specifications, covering construction, design, and statutory approvals. The mid-range (Tier 2 standard finishes) lands at ₹53L–₹87L. A G+3 foundation premium of ₹2.5L–₹4.5L applies for the deeper foundation that four floors require — this is a fixed cost, not per sq ft, and is amortised across the full 3,100 sq ft built-up area.
Can the upper floors be made into independent rental units in a 30×40 G+3 house?
Yes — and this is one of the strongest financial arguments for going G+3 on a 30×40 north-facing plot. The second and third floors in this design are configured for optional independence: separate electrical meters, lockable staircase access between floors, and self-contained bathrooms and kitchenettes are built in from the design stage. A self-contained 2BHK on an upper floor of a well-located G+3 building in Bengaluru fetches ₹18,000–₹28,000/month in rent, giving a gross rental yield of 4–6% per annum on the construction cost of those two floors — consistently above fixed deposit rates.
How long does construction take for a 30×40 G+3 house in India?
A complete G+3 build on a 30×40 plot typically takes 18–26 months from foundation to handover. The structural phase — foundation, columns, and all four slabs — takes 9–12 months. Brick infill and plastering: 3–4 months. Finishing (tiles, painting, woodwork, plumbing fixtures, electrical): 5–7 months. Material supply delays and monsoon interruptions add 2–4 months on average. Using a professional project management service to supervise milestones and quality checks can reduce the total timeline by 15–20% and significantly reduce costly rework.
