Indoor atrium trees
Indoor atrium trees
Indoor/atrium trees are planned around light, HVAC behavior, and container/installation constraints. The engineering focus is on stable placement, irrigation establishment, and an aftercare routine the facility can maintain.
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Category visual guide
Visual context for placement, scale, handling, and landscape integration.
Section
What procurement should validate early
- Light availability: confirm natural light patterns and acceptable shade windows.
- HVAC and airflow: identify zones with stable temperature and avoid direct stress.
- Container and movement: define how trees are delivered, placed, and protected during installation.
Section
Installation and aftercare scope
Installation should include container/planting detail alignment, irrigation establishment planning, and a documented care routine so maintenance does not become guesswork. If imported, compliance workflow still applies, and it should be planned in the project schedule before delivery.
Section
Compliance and scheduling
For a procurement-first compliance overview (informational only), see import permits & phytosanitary/quarantine.
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- What light and HVAC assumptions do atrium trees need?
- Low/indirect-tolerant species still need minimum lux and stable humidity — coordinate with MEP before species lock; dark atriums bleach or drop foliage.
- Why does overwatering kill money trees despite the name Pachira aquatica?
- Interior pots without drainage rot roots — irrigation schedules must match porosity, not sympathy watering from facilities teams.
- How do container and slab interfaces affect large indoor specimens?
- Waterproofing, drain paths, and crane access through curtain wall phases belong in architectural scope — horticulture cannot fix slab ponding after install.
- Which species tolerate genuinely low light in Indian offices?
- Dracaena fragrans/marginata classes and some aralias — not sun palms or ficus benjamina without supplemental light; species pages state minimum light band.
- Does braided-trunk Pachira require different AMC than cane Dracaena?
- Yes — braid points and base rot are inspection items; Dracaena needs fluoride/tip-burn monitoring on municipal water.

