Share:
ATREY DESIGN STUDIO is a hub of inspiration, design, and creative innovation. The vision of this project is to create an office that radiates unique design ideas every day. The main inspiration for the project is the form of a tree, which is the most striking feature of the building, resembling a sturdy tree trunk with branching limbs, as if sprouting new growth. The complex form of the tree has been translated into the studio’s structure, focusing on the relationship between shape and structural strength—ultimately making the building appear as a living, organic entity.
Key Architectural Strategies of ATREY DESIGN STUDIO, designed by ATREY & ASSOCIATES:







Follow us for more Green ideas.
Build Green. Build with ARDOR Green.
#ARDORSeeds. #LEED. #LOTUS. #EDGE. #ESG. #GreenBuilding. #Sustainability.
Vietnam is increasingly demonstrating strong commitment to reducing emissions and responding to climate change by placing “sustainable cooling” at the center of urban planning and development.
Urban nature isn’t a decorative layer. It cools streets, filters water, reduces floods, supports pollinators—and improves human wellbeing.
A resilient city is an urban area capable of absorbing, adapting to, and recovering from shocks and long-term stresses — from acute disasters such as storms, floods, and landslides, to chronic pressures such as rapid urbanization, ecosystem degradation, and supply-chain vulnerabilities.
As resource scarcity intensifies and geopolitical instability escalates, the concept of resource autonomy is emerging as a strategic priority. This article analyzes how resource autonomy not only complements but may even surpass the circular economy as a framework that enables industrial systems to adapt to the future.
Amid growing pressures from rapid urbanization, high population density, environmental pollution, and increasing demand for clean food, urban agriculture is emerging as an integrated solution to several of Ho Chi Minh City’s challenges.
As urbanization accelerates and Vietnam commits to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050, the choice of urban development model is no longer just a matter of planning—it’s a strategic decision. We now stand at a crossroads: continue expanding cities the old way, or proactively build green, sustainable cities that ensure quality of life and a safe future for communities.