An architectural approach that uses local climate conditions to optimize building performance, reducing energy consumption through natural ventilation, solar orientation, and thermal mass strategies adapted to tropical environments.
Brise-Soleil
A permanent sun-shading structure, often a perforated wall or grid of horizontal and vertical fins, placed on the exterior of a building to reduce heat gain while allowing natural light. Pioneered by Le Corbusier, widely adopted across tropical modernism.
Brutalism
An architectural style characterized by exposed concrete surfaces and bold geometric forms. In tropical contexts, brutalist buildings often incorporate deep recesses, shading devices, and cross-ventilation strategies to mitigate heat.
C
Courtyard House
A dwelling organized around a central open-air court, providing natural light, ventilation, and a private outdoor space. A fundamental typology in tropical vernacular architecture, reinterpreted by modernists like Geoffrey Bawa.
Cross-Ventilation
A passive cooling strategy that uses opposing openings to create airflow through a building, expelling hot air and drawing in cooler breezes. Essential in humid tropical climates where air movement is the primary comfort mechanism.
G
Green Roof
A vegetated roof system that provides insulation, reduces stormwater runoff, and mitigates the urban heat island effect. In tropical settings, green roofs also create habitats for local biodiversity and buffer against extreme rainfall.
L
Louvered Windows
Windows composed of horizontal slats angled to admit air while blocking direct sunlight and rain. A signature element of tropical architecture, allowing continuous ventilation even during monsoon conditions.
O
Overhanging Eaves
Extended roof projections that shade walls and windows from high-angle tropical sun while protecting openings from heavy rain. A centuries-old vernacular technique that became a defining feature of tropical modern houses.
P
Passive Cooling
Design techniques that maintain comfortable indoor temperatures without mechanical air conditioning through orientation, shading, natural ventilation, thermal mass, and evaporative cooling. The foundational principle of tropical modernism.
Permeable Facade
A building envelope that allows air, light, and sometimes views to pass through, using screens, lattices, or open joints. Creates a buffer zone that filters the tropical climate rather than sealing it out entirely.
Pilotis
Columns or stilts that elevate a building above the ground, a modernist device popularized by Le Corbusier. In the tropics, pilotis raise living spaces above flood levels, capture breezes, and free the ground plane for gardens or parking.
S
Shading Devices
Architectural elements including overhangs, fins, pergolas, and screens designed to block direct solar radiation. Properly designed shading can reduce cooling loads by 30-50% in tropical buildings.
T
Thermal Mass
The ability of a material — typically concrete, stone, or rammed earth — to absorb and store heat during the day and release it at night. In tropical climates, thermal mass must be paired with night ventilation to avoid heat buildup.
Tropical Modernism
An architectural movement that adapted the principles of international modernism to hot, humid climates. Characterized by open plans, deep shading, natural ventilation, local materials, and a close relationship between interior and exterior spaces.
V
Vernacular Architecture
Indigenous building traditions shaped by local climate, materials, and culture over generations. Tropical vernacular techniques — elevated floors, deep verandas, pitched roofs — directly informed the tropical modernist movement.