Track Record · High-rise · Pasig City

Avida Parklinks

Two residential towers in the Parklinks estate — floors L7–L40 over a six-level podium, amenity deck and pool at L6.

Metro Manila · Philippines 3 min read Carlos Caramés Molero · Dynamis
Avida Parklinks — architectural rendering of the two residential towers.
Avida Parklinks — architectural rendering of the two-tower development.
2
Towers
L7–L40
Floors
Pasig City
Location
Dynamis
Engineering bench

In Brgy. Manggahan, Pasig City, Avida Parklinks rises as two residential towers across floors L7–L40, over a six-level podium with an amenity deck and pool at L6. Behind its seismic design sits Dynamis — through structural design, concept development or independent peer review — for Ayala Group, in one of the most seismically exposed capitals on earth.

The building

Two residential towers, floors L7–L40, a six-level podium and an amenity deck with pool at L6, within the Parklinks estate. Dynamis brought performance-based seismic design to the engagement — through structural design, concept development or independent peer review.

Parklinks estate — structural model of the landmark arch bridge.
Parklinks — structural model of the estate's landmark arch bridge over the Marikina River (Dynamis).

Performance-based seismic design

A tall building in a high-seismicity city is not designed to a generic rulebook; it is designed to perform — to deform, dissipate and stay standing through motion that would break a code-minimum structure. That discipline is performance-based seismic design, and it is the engineering Dynamis brings to towers like this one: calibrated to the site, not to a table in a code.

Seismotectonic context

The tower stands in Brgy. Manggahan, Pasig City, inside one of the most seismically exposed capital regions on earth. The map shows the regional fault context and the historical earthquakes recorded around the site.

Project location: Brgy. Manggahan, Pasig City, Philippines · 14.594, 121.087

Approximate district location; historical seismicity (M 6+) within ~400 km. Source: USGS.

Why it matters for portfolio risk

From engineering to risk intelligence

"Fragility curves today are built on simplified assumptions. Ours are built on 15 years of designing structures that cannot fail. By embedding performance-based seismic design into AI-driven models, we transform fragility from generic to engineering-grade. This is not an incremental improvement — it's a structural shift in how seismic risk is quantified."

— Carlos Caramés Molero, Founder & Partner, Dynamis

From that bench come the indicators a (re)insurer actually books: PML for catastrophe risk capital, AAL for technical premium, EP curves for accumulation control, and SCR for Solvency II capital efficiency.

Key questions

Did Dynamis work on Avida Parklinks?

Yes. Avida Parklinks (Brgy. Manggahan, Pasig City) is part of the Philippine high-rise portfolio where Dynamis has applied performance-based seismic design — through structural design, concept development or independent peer review — for the country's leading developers, between 2014 and 2026.

Why does Philippine high-rise experience matter for catastrophe risk?

Metro Manila is one of the world's most seismically exposed capitals. Designing the towers that must perform there produces engineering-grade vulnerability for the high-rise asset class, sharpening PML and accumulation views for insurers with tower exposure.

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