What is Luantou Fengshui
A Geography-Based Study Rooted in Mountain and Water Forms
Luantou Fengshui, also known as the Form School, is one of the oldest and most central schools of fengshui. It takes the shapes, flow patterns, and orientations of natural landscapes as its object of study. By observing the five key elements — Dragon (mountain range flow), Acupoint (qi concentration spot), Sands (protective/auxiliary hills), Water (water flow direction), and Orientation (sitting and facing direction) — one judges the auspiciousness of geographical formations. Luantou is the substance; Liqi (compass school) is the application. Without a solid luantou foundation, even the most meticulous liqi calculations are castles in the air.
First observe whether the incoming dragon is affectionate and well-formed, then examine whether the acupoint captures qi, next check whether sands and water embrace and show affection, and finally set the orientation to receive the qi of the mountains and water.
Core Elements of Luantou Fengshui
Career & Wealth
See detailed breakdown in the main content
Love & Relationship
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Personality
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Health
See detailed breakdown in the main content
Classical References
How to Apply Luantou Fengshui
- Observing the Dragon: Judging Whether the Incoming Vein Shows Affection : Dragon veins that are meandering, with rises and falls and protective escorts, are auspicious. Avoid rigid, straight forms like a dead snake; avoid fractured, broken, or turning-away-with-rejection formations. In cities, continuous, rhythmically varied building complexes can be treated as incoming dragons.
- Determining the Acupoint: Seeking Where Qi Gathers : The acupoint is where qi concentrates, ideally found at the stopping point of the dragon vein, at the confluence of water flows, within the embrace of mountains and water. The acupoint site should be flat and open (bright hall), with backing behind (Black Tortoise), protection left and right (Azure Dragon and White Tiger), and a facing feature in front (Vermilion Bird).
- Inspecting the Sands: Protective Hills and Sha Hills : Sands are the hills or buildings surrounding the acupoint. The Azure Dragon (left) and White Tiger (right) should embrace and protect (showing affection); avoid turning away or arching backward (rejection). The front Table Mountain should be low and not oppressive; the Facing Mountain should be elegant and not overbearing. In cities, surrounding buildings are the sands.
- Examining Water: Inflow, Outflow, Gathering, and Storage : Water is auspicious when it meanders and embraces, with the source not visible and the outflow not apparent. Avoid Arching-Back Water (bending away like a bow), Direct-Charging Water (road charging straight), and Foot-Cutting Water (tightly hugging the building base). In cities, roads are treated as water; viaducts and expressways require particular caution.
Luantou Fengshui FAQ
Q: What is the difference between Luantou Fengshui and Liqi Fengshui?
A:
Luantou (Form School) focuses on the actual shapes and spatial relationships of natural landscapes, centered on Dragon, Acupoint, Sands, Water, and Orientation — emphasizing 'visible formations.' Liqi (such as Xuan Kong, Bazhai) focuses on direction, time cycles, and Bagua Five Element calculations — emphasizing 'invisible qi fortune.' The two complement each other: Luantou is the substance, Liqi is the application.
Q: I live in a city high-rise — there are no mountains or rivers. Does Luantou Fengshui still apply?
A:
Absolutely. Urban Luantou treats buildings as mountains and roads as water — surrounding buildings are sands (protective or sha hills), and roads are water (incoming or outgoing). Viaducts, underground passages, and parking garage entrances must all be factored in.
Q: Among Dragon, Acupoint, Sands, Water, and Orientation, which is the most important?
A:
The five elements form a unified whole — none can be omitted. But if one must prioritize: obtaining water is foremost (water methods are the most critical), and storing wind is secondary (the combined effect of dragon, acupoint, and sands). In practice, first seek the dragon, then determine the acupoint, then inspect sands and water, and finally set the orientation.
Q: How do I assess whether my own residence conforms to Luantou formations?
A:
Inspect from outside to inside: check whether surrounding roads arch back or charge directly (water methods), whether left and right buildings embrace or have sharp-corner charging (sands), whether there is a reliable building behind as backing/mountain support (Black Tortoise), and whether the front is open and not cramped (bright hall).