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What the WELL Building Standard Actually Measures
The WELL Building Standard does something no other major green certification does. It comes to the finished building and tests air, water, light, sound, and thermal performance with instruments. Ten concepts, four certification levels, third-party verification every three years. A clear read on what WELL measures, how it differs from LEED and EDGE, and when pursuing it makes sense for tropical residential buildings in Phnom Penh.

Sreyna Vale
3 days ago5 min read
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Ceiling Heights and the Math of 300 Millimeters
Ceiling height is treated as a finish-level choice. It is not. It is a structural decision made at the brief stage, locked before the first elevation is drawn, and almost impossible to revisit. The compounding effects on daylight, airflow, thermal performance, and resale value run the full life of the building. Three hundred millimeters at the top of the room is more consequential than the dimension suggests.

Sreyna Vale
4 days ago4 min read
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Balcony Depth and the Usable Outdoor Square Meter
A balcony at 1.0 meter fits one chair. At 1.5 meters, a small table appears. At 2.0 meters, the balcony becomes a room. Most pricing models count balcony square meters at half the indoor rate, but usability is a function of depth, not footprint. In a tropical climate, depth also decides whether the space survives a passing storm. The single number worth carrying into a unit viewing is balcony depth.

Sreyna Vale
6 days ago5 min read
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Amenity Floor Distribution and the Capacity Question
Most condominium towers in this market place every amenity on a single floor. It reads well on a brochure and underperforms on a Saturday afternoon. A look at the capacity math, the vertical travel penalty, and what a dispersed amenity program does differently when the brief is written properly.

Sreyna Vale
May 194 min read
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How the SHGC number decides what tropical glazing actually costs to run.
Glazing is the largest single thermal decision in a tropical building envelope, and the metric that matters is SHGC. Clear single-pane glass admits 84 percent of solar energy. A properly specified low-e unit cuts that below 25 percent. The math compounds across every electricity bill for the life of the building, and most of the decision sits in the spec sheet rather than the showroom.

Sreyna Vale
May 154 min read
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The Party Wall STC That Decides Resident Retention
Most condominium party walls in tropical residential construction never reach the STC 50 code minimum. The number sits in the framing details and shows up later, when residents hear their neighbor's life through the wall. STC is not a comfort metric. It is the construction decision that determines retention, resale velocity, and whether a unit remains the private space it was offered as.

Sreyna Vale
May 125 min read
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How an Architectural Brief Is Actually Developed
An architectural brief, developed properly, takes four to eight weeks and produces a fifteen to thirty page document. Most projects spend ten days on it. The cost of that compression does not show up at handover. It shows up in year five, when no one remembers who decided what. The brief is the highest-leverage stage in the entire process, and almost always the most rushed.

Sreyna Vale
May 114 min read
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The True Cost of Cheap Finishes in Tropical Buildings
Cheap finishes are not cheap. They are loans the building takes out against future maintenance budgets, and tropical climates accelerate the repayment schedule. The procurement saving on a lobby tile or a door handle disappears by the second replacement cycle, and goes negative from there. A look at the math of finishes selection in mid-rise residential, and how the discipline of allocating deliberately changes how a building ages.

Sreyna Vale
May 64 min read
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The LEED Certification Pathway for Tropical Buildings
LEED v5 went live in April 2025 with a new scoring logic. Half the points sit in decarbonization. A quarter in quality of life. A quarter in ecological conservation. For tropical buildings designed with the climate in mind, the shift rewards work that was already underway. The real question is not the tier. It is when the certification enters the design process. Begin at the brief and the points follow the design.

Sreyna Vale
Apr 294 min read
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The Architect-Developer Tension Is a Cost-vs-Lifecycle Argument
The architect-developer tension is usually framed as a clash of taste. The honest read is mathematical. The developer reads one column on the spreadsheet, which is construction cost. The architect reads two, which are construction cost and lifecycle cost. Both columns are real. Most value-engineering meetings only put one of them on the table.

Sreyna Vale
Apr 284 min read
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