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Mahoney — Tabel

In an era of energy-hungry HVAC systems and complex climate modeling software, the Mahoney Tables stand as a testament to the power of simplicity. Developed in the 1970s by architect Carl Mahoney and his colleagues at the London Architectural Association, this systematic, pen-and-paper tool enables designers to analyze a site’s climate and prescribe passive design strategies—without a single kilowatt of computational power. What Are the Mahoney Tables? The Mahoney Tables are a set of sequential checklists and charts used to convert raw climatic data (temperature, humidity, precipitation, wind) into concrete architectural recommendations. They bridge the gap between meteorology and building design, helping architects answer one fundamental question: "Given this specific climate, what kind of building form, envelope, and openings will keep people comfortable?"

Try applying the Mahoney Tables to three different climate zones – hot-dry, hot-humid, and temperate. You will likely find that vernacular architecture in each zone already follows the tables’ recommendations. That is not a coincidence – it is validation. Keywords: Mahoney Tables, bioclimatic architecture, passive design, climate-responsive design, tropical housing, architectural methodology. tabel mahoney

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