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Flood-Resilient Architecture for Phnom Penh
Most ground floors in Phnom Penh sit 30 to 45 centimeters above the adjacent sidewalk. A heavy October storm can put 20 to 40 centimeters of water on a street in under an hour. The margin is thinner than it looks. Flood-resilient architecture begins with a single number, and the decisions that follow it determine whether a building recovers from a serious storm or rebuilds after it.

Sreyna Vale
2 days ago4 min read


Material Selection for Tropical Durability
Material selection in the tropics is the most consequential design decision after orientation. UV breaks down polymers, humidity cycles through every porous surface, and monsoon rain finds every joint. This piece breaks down what survives fifteen years of Phnom Penh weather, what fails by year seven, and the specification discipline serious builders run before construction documents are issued.

Sreyna Vale
May 214 min read


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


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


How Tropical Buildings Survive Monsoon Season
A single monsoon event in Phnom Penh can deliver 80 millimeters of rain in under two hours. Most buildings that fail the wet season do not fail at the roof. They fail at the joint between the roof and the parapet, the wall and the window. This is the design discipline that decides whether a tropical building stays dry for fifteen years or starts staining at year three.

Sreyna Vale
Apr 304 min read
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