Odom Living is the residential part of the larger Odom development on Norodom Boulevard in Tonle Bassac, Khan Chamkarmon. The whole project combines homes, offices and retail space in one complex.
The residential tower, Odom Living, has a relatively low number of units compared to many Phnom Penh condos, and most of them are on the larger side. Layouts range from one-bedroom to four-bedroom apartments, with sizes roughly from the high-70s square metres up to well over 200 square metres for the biggest units.
The building sits on top of a shared podium with shops and shared facilities. Above that are the residential floors, reached by a separate lobby and lift core. Official timelines place completion around the 2026–2027 period, depending on which part of the project you look at.
Developer and concept
Odom is developed by Urban Living Solutions (ULS), a local Cambodian developer known for mixed-use and community-focused projects.
The main ideas behind Odom Living are pretty straightforward:
- create a vertical neighbourhood where you live, work and go out in the same place
- offer bigger, more practical apartments that suit people actually living there full-time
- place more emphasis on design, greenery and shared space than on squeezing in as many units as possible
This explains why the apartments are larger than usual, why there’s a lot of attention to common areas, and why the project sits in the upper segment of the city market.
Location: Norodom Boulevard, Tonle Bassac
Odom Living is on Norodom Boulevard, in Sangkat Tonle Bassac, Khan Chamkarmon. Norodom is one of Phnom Penh’s main roads, running north–south through the central city.
From this spot, you are close to BKK1, Aeon Mall 1, Bassac Lane, Koh Pich (Diamond Island) and the riverside area. The immediate surroundings mix villas, embassies, low-rise shophouses, condos and office buildings.
Things worth noting about the location:
- It is very central and easy to find.
- Traffic can be heavy and the street can be noisy, especially at peak times.
- The wider Tonle Bassac area continues to change, with new projects and upgrades over time.
So, it’s a dense urban location rather than a quiet neighbourhood.
Masterplan and building configuration
Odom is planned as a three-part mixed-use project sitting on a shared podium:
- Odom Square – the podium base with retail, F&B, services and landscaped decks.
- Odom Tower – a Grade A office tower with business-focused facilities.
- Odom Living – the residential tower with condo units and residents’ facilities.
The podium ties everything together. It holds the main retail and lifestyle areas, a pool deck and green terraces. The offices and residences are stacked above, each with their own lobbies and lift systems, so residents don’t share everyday circulation with office workers and visitors.
A branded hotel component is also planned within the complex, which will add another layer of services and activity once it opens.
The residences: unit mix and layouts
Odom Living focuses on fewer, larger homes rather than many small units.
Typical points:
- One-bedroom condos range from 78 m² to 80 m². There are 42 one-bedroom units in total.
- Two-bedroom units range from 111 m² to 134 m² and there are 66 in total.
- Three-bedroom units are all 196 m² and there are 20 units in total in the building.
- Four-bedroom units are the largest at 262 m². There are only 10 of these four-bedroom units in the building.
Inside, the layouts are planned around proper living and dining areas, not just compact open-plan spaces. Most plans feature large balconies or loggias, decent kitchen space, good natural light from bigger windows and built-in storage. The design is aimed more at end-users and long-term residents than short-stay or very budget-conscious investors.
Facilities and services
Residents of Odom Living use both the private residential facilities and parts of the wider complex.
On the residential side, you can expect a lobby with security, a swimming pool and pool deck, a gym, landscaped garden areas, and some kind of children’s play space. Parking for cars and motorbikes is in the lower levels.
From the wider complex, residents benefit from having cafés, restaurants, shops and other services downstairs in Odom Square, plus the general convenience of being connected to an office tower and future hotel. The project is also positioned as pet-friendly, with some thought given to outdoor areas and circulation for residents with pets.
Ownership structure and who can buy
Odom Living is sold as strata-title condominiums. This is the usual “co-owned building” structure in Cambodia.
In simple terms:
- Cambodian buyers can hold these titles freely.
- Foreign buyers can also own units under the condo law, as long as the unit is not on the ground floor and foreign ownership stays within the building’s legal limits.
Construction progress and timeline
Early works for Odom started a while ago, and the project has moved through its main construction phases. Different public sources and marketing materials point to a handover window roughly between late 2026 and 2027 for the residential component, with the hotel and other parts lining up around a similar period. According to the developer, they are planning for completion in 2027.
Buyer profile and use cases (informational, not sales pitch)
Given the size of the units, the central location and the mixed-use setup, Odom Living tends to appeal to:
- local families who want to live in a central condo with more space than average
- long-term expatriates and professionals working in the nearby office and embassy zones and want to live in a premium, high-end development.
- investors who are targeting higher-end tenants and are comfortable with higher service charges and a premium entry price
Because everything is designed as a full-service central project with offices, hotel and retail, the product naturally sits at the upper end of Phnom Penh’s condo price range.
Practical pros and “things to think about”
Some potential advantages:
- Very central address on Norodom Boulevard with easy access to key city areas.
- Larger, more liveable unit sizes compared to many new condos.
- Mixed-use environment with shops, F&B, offices and a future hotel in the same complex.
- A developer with a track record in similar urban projects.
Things to consider:
- Being on Norodom means living in a busy, noisy urban corridor, not a quiet side street.
- Prices and ongoing service charges are likely to be higher than in more basic or peripheral projects.
- Mixed-use projects have more people moving through the complex daily, which some people like and others find too busy.
- Until every part of the project is fully completed and occupied, there will be a period of ongoing fit-out, tenant move-ins and adjustments.
This kind of framing keeps the description informational, so readers can decide for themselves whether Odom Living fits what they are looking for.