// Project data, About content, Sustainability principles
const PROJECTS = [
  {
    id: 'shwasam',
    title: 'Shwasam',
    titleItalic: 'Multipurpose Hall',
    location: 'Malappuram, Kerala',
    year: '2023',
    status: 'Completed',
    category: 'Completed',
    type: 'Public · Cultural',
    typology: 'Multipurpose Hall',
    area: '— sqft',
    materials: 'Compressed earth blocks, bamboo, country wood, terracotta',
    hero: 'img/shwasam-3.jpg',
    cover: 'img/shwasam-3.jpg',
    cardSize: 'lg',
    short: 'A breathing public hall woven from compressed earth blocks and bamboo, sited within a Kerala farmstay.',
    body: [
      'Shwasam — meaning "breath" in Sanskrit — is a low-impact gathering space woven directly into a working farmstay landscape. The brief called for a multipurpose hall that could host yoga, music and community meals while sitting almost invisibly inside the canopy.',
      'The shell is built from compressed stabilised earth blocks made on-site, lifted on country-wood posts and capped with a thin terracotta-tile roof. By keeping the foundation footprint minimal and the walls breathable, the hall remains 4–5°C cooler than the ambient afternoon temperature without any active cooling.',
      'Every detail is climate-led: the deep eaves throw monsoon water clear of the earth walls, the lattice gables draw cross-ventilation through the volume, and a small ablution court collects rain runoff for the kitchen garden behind.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/shwasam-3.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/shwasam-2.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/shwasam-4.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/shwasam-5.jpg', size: 'twothird' },
      { src: 'img/shwasam-6.jpg', size: 'tall' },
      { src: 'img/shwasam-7.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/shwasam-8.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/shwasam-9.jpg', size: 'full' },
    ],
  },
  {
    id: 'farmstay',
    title: 'Restrooms &',
    titleItalic: 'Changing Rooms',
    location: 'Malappuram, Kerala',
    year: '2023',
    status: 'Completed',
    category: 'Completed',
    type: 'Hospitality',
    typology: 'Service Pavilion',
    area: '— sqft',
    materials: 'Laterite stone, lime plaster, country wood, recycled tile',
    hero: 'img/farmstay-13.jpg',
    cover: 'img/farmstay-13.jpg',
    cardSize: 'md',
    short: 'A pair of laterite-stone service pavilions for a forest farmstay — humble in plan, sculptural in detail.',
    body: [
      'Two small service buildings — restrooms and a changing room — for the same Malappuram farmstay. The brief was deliberately humble: the architecture had to defer to the surrounding food forest while still feeling cared-for, even ceremonial.',
      'Locally quarried laterite stone, lime-plastered floors poured by hand, salvaged Mangalore tiles and a yellow ochre curtain at the threshold form the entire material palette. The curved plans hug existing trees rather than displace them.',
      'Lighting is incandescent, warm, low — designed for the slow ritual of a guest washing off a day in the field.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/farmstay-13.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-15.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-19.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-2.jpg', size: 'twothird' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-3.jpg', size: 'tall' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-7.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-8.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-12.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-17.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/farmstay-20.jpg', size: 'half' },
    ],
  },
  {
    id: 'reception-block',
    title: 'Reception',
    titleItalic: 'Block',
    location: 'Malappuram, Kerala',
    year: '2022',
    status: 'Completed',
    category: 'Completed',
    type: 'Hospitality',
    typology: 'Reception Pavilion',
    area: '— sqft',
    materials: 'Laterite, country wood, palmyra thatch',
    hero: 'img/reception-block-3.jpg',
    cover: 'img/reception-block-1.jpg',
    cardSize: 'md',
    short: 'An open laterite drum that greets guests at the gate of the farmstay — half hut, half garden folly.',
    body: [
      'A circular open-sided shelter at the entry of the Malappuram farmstay, made from the same laterite block as the restrooms but topped with a thatched palmyra cap. It works as a check-in point, a rain shelter and an informal meeting room.',
      'Sited next to a single fruiting tree, the building celebrates rather than hides the climate: it is open on three sides, lit at night by a string of bulbs, and reads first as a piece of garden furniture.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/reception-block-1.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/reception-block-3.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/reception-block-2.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/reception-block-7.jpg', size: 'twothird' },
      { src: 'img/reception-block-4.jpg', size: 'tall' },
      { src: 'img/reception-block-5.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/reception-block-6.jpg', size: 'half' },
    ],
  },
  {
    id: 'sivapuri',
    title: 'Sivapuri Siva Temple',
    titleItalic: 'Compound Wall',
    location: 'Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu',
    year: 'Ongoing · 2024',
    status: 'Ongoing',
    category: 'Ongoing',
    type: 'Religious · Heritage',
    typology: 'Compound Wall',
    area: '420 ft perimeter',
    materials: 'Hand-moulded brick, country wood props, lime mortar',
    hero: 'img/sivapuri-temple-9.jpg',
    cover: 'img/sivapuri-temple-9.jpg',
    cardSize: 'lg',
    short: 'A hand-built brick perimeter for a centuries-old Siva temple, devised so that masons could be trained on site.',
    body: [
      'A new compound wall for the Sivapuri Siva temple in Chidambaram. Beyond simply enclosing the precinct, the wall functions as a low-slung relief: a rhythm of offset bays, projected sills and shadow-throwing lugs that catch the morning sun.',
      'The construction is deliberately slow and pedagogic. Local masons are being trained on site to detail the lugs and prop-frames, so the wall doubles as a living workshop for vernacular brickwork.',
      'Lime mortar replaces cement throughout. The wall is meant to weather, not stay clean — and to keep teaching long after the project closes.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/sivapuri-temple-9.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/sivapuri-temple-5.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/sivapuri-temple-6.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/sivapuri-temple-7.jpg', size: 'twothird' },
      { src: 'img/sivapuri-temple-8.jpg', size: 'tall' },
      { src: 'img/sivapuri-temple-10.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/sivapuri-temple-11.jpg', size: 'half' },
    ],
  },
  {
    id: 'timbrel-vault',
    title: 'Timbrel Vault',
    titleItalic: 'Residence',
    location: 'Shoolagiri, Tamil Nadu',
    year: 'Ongoing · 2025',
    status: 'Ongoing',
    category: 'Ongoing',
    type: 'Residential',
    typology: 'Single Family Home',
    area: '2,400 sqft',
    materials: 'Catalan tile vaults, mud plaster, recycled steel',
    hero: 'img/timbrel-vault-3.jpg',
    cover: 'img/timbrel-vault-2.jpg',
    cardSize: 'sm',
    short: 'A residence whose entire roof is made of thin tile vaults — Catalan technique, Indian materials.',
    body: [
      'A studied experiment in roof-as-structure. The entire residence is sheltered by a flowing landscape of timbrel (Catalan) tile vaults — three layers of locally fired tile laid in lime, with no formwork beyond a small movable guide.',
      'The technique is centuries old and delivers a thin, light, strong shell at a fraction of the embodied carbon of a slab. It also produces a roof you can walk on, plant on, and harvest rainwater off.',
      'Site-cast structural prototypes (shown here as scaled mock-ups in plaster) preceded construction, allowing the team to refine geometry and centring before committing to fired tile.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-2.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-3.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-4.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-5.jpg', size: 'twothird' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-6.jpg', size: 'tall' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-7.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-8.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-9.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/timbrel-vault-10.jpg', size: 'half' },
    ],
  },
  {
    id: 'farmhouse-theni',
    title: 'Farm House',
    titleItalic: 'at Theni',
    location: 'Theni, Tamil Nadu',
    year: 'Proposed · 2024',
    status: 'Proposed',
    category: 'Proposed',
    type: 'Residential',
    typology: 'Farmhouse',
    area: '3,800 sqft',
    materials: 'Brick, country wood, bamboo trusses',
    hero: 'img/farmhouse-theni-2.jpg',
    cover: 'img/farmhouse-theni-2.jpg',
    cardSize: 'sm',
    short: 'A circular brick pavilion under a cantilevered timber-and-bamboo roof, set within a working farm.',
    body: [
      'A retreat for a family that wanted to spend weekends on their working farm without losing connection to it. The plan is a single circular brick volume slipped under a deep, cantilevered timber-and-bamboo roof — equal parts shade structure and storm shelter.',
      'The cantilever creates a wide, uninterrupted verandah that does the work that air-conditioning would do elsewhere. Inside, brick screens diffuse the southern light into the shrine room.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/farmhouse-theni-2.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/farmhouse-theni-3.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/farmhouse-theni-1.jpg', size: 'half' },
    ],
  },
  {
    id: 'fitness-coimbatore',
    title: 'Fitness Equipment',
    titleItalic: 'Centre',
    location: 'Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu',
    year: 'Proposed · 2024',
    status: 'Proposed',
    category: 'Proposed',
    type: 'Commercial',
    typology: 'Fitness Centre',
    area: '6,200 sqft',
    materials: 'Perforated brick screen, exposed concrete',
    hero: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-1.jpg',
    cover: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-1.jpg',
    cardSize: 'sm',
    short: 'A perforated brick jaali wraps a high-volume training floor — privacy without losing daylight.',
    body: [
      'A street-facing fitness centre in central Coimbatore. The challenge: a deep, high-ceilinged training floor that needs daylight but no direct view from the street.',
      'A double-height brick jaali — a perforated screen drawn from local mosque and palace traditions — wraps the front facade. The pattern is calibrated so that, at typical eye height, the floor reads as private from outside but luminous from inside.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-1.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-2.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-3.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-4.jpg', size: 'twothird' },
      { src: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-5.jpg', size: 'tall' },
      { src: 'img/fitness-coimbatore-6.jpg', size: 'half' },
    ],
  },
  {
    id: 'vsr-restaurant',
    title: 'VSR',
    titleItalic: 'Restaurant',
    location: 'Palladam, Tirupur',
    year: 'Proposed · 2024',
    status: 'Proposed',
    category: 'Proposed',
    type: 'Hospitality',
    typology: 'Restaurant',
    area: '4,400 sqft',
    materials: 'Brick, exposed RCC, terrazzo',
    hero: 'img/vsr-restaurant-1.jpg',
    cover: 'img/vsr-restaurant-1.jpg',
    cardSize: 'sm',
    short: 'A highway-side restaurant whose plan is set out around the existing trees rather than a parking grid.',
    body: [
      'A roadside dining hall for a Tirupur family business. Most highway restaurants begin with a rectangle and a parking grid; this one starts with the trees already on the plot.',
      'Five mature tamarind and neem trees were surveyed before the plan was drawn. The dining wings are then woven between them, each with a private courtyard at the back tied to the kitchen garden.',
    ],
    images: [
      { src: 'img/vsr-restaurant-1.jpg', size: 'full' },
      { src: 'img/vsr-restaurant-2.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/vsr-restaurant-3.jpg', size: 'half' },
      { src: 'img/vsr-restaurant-4.jpg', size: 'twothird' },
    ],
  },
];

const SUSTAINABILITY_PRINCIPLES = [
  {
    n: '01',
    title: 'Build with what is around you',
    body: 'We start every project by walking the site and asking what stone, soil, timber and skill is already on the land or within ten kilometres. The shorter the supply line, the smaller the carbon footprint — and the more rooted the building.',
  },
  {
    n: '02',
    title: 'Climate is the first design tool',
    body: 'Eaves, jaalis, courtyards, cross-ventilation, thermal mass. The vernacular climate response of South India quietly cools and shades buildings before any electrical system is asked to.',
  },
  {
    n: '03',
    title: 'Craft as collaboration',
    body: 'We work with masons and carpenters as collaborators, not just contractors. Time spent at the wall — drawing details with the people building them — is what carries the craft into the finished building.',
  },
  {
    n: '04',
    title: 'Earth, lime, brick over cement',
    body: 'Ordinary Portland cement carries a heavy carbon load. Where structurally honest, we substitute compressed earth blocks, lime mortars, country wood and reclaimed steel.',
  },
  {
    n: '05',
    title: 'Water belongs to the building',
    body: 'Every roof is a watershed. Every site holds rain. We design from the outset for runoff capture, percolation and grey-water reuse rather than treating water as an afterthought.',
  },
  {
    n: '06',
    title: 'Repair, reuse, salvage',
    body: 'Old country wood, vintage Mangalore tiles, salvaged grills. Working with reclaimed material is not a budget choice — it is a line drawn against waste.',
  },
];

const ABOUT_PRINCIPLES = [
  { num: '01', title: 'Site before brief', body: 'We read the land first — slope, breeze, trees, soil — then write a brief that fits it.' },
  { num: '02', title: 'Climate-led plan', body: 'Orientation, eaves and openings do most of the cooling before any machine is plugged in.' },
  { num: '03', title: 'Mason as collaborator', body: 'We resolve details at the wall, alongside the people building it — that is where the craft survives.' },
  { num: '04', title: 'Material honesty', body: 'Brick is brick. Mud is mud. Wood shows its grain. Nothing pretends to be something else.' },
];

window.PROJECTS = PROJECTS;
window.SUSTAINABILITY_PRINCIPLES = SUSTAINABILITY_PRINCIPLES;
window.ABOUT_PRINCIPLES = ABOUT_PRINCIPLES;
