Phnom Penh Galaxy Garden is a mid-to-large scale condo development in Khan Sen Sok, in the Kmounh/Phnom Penh Thmei side of the district, near the Hanoi Road corridor. It’s positioned in a part of Phnom Penh that’s known more for “daily convenience” than nightlife, shopping malls, supermarkets, schools and wide roads, so it tends to suit people who want easy errands and car access.
What the project is, in practical terms
This is a high-rise project of about 33 floors, completed around early 2023. It’s a high-unit-count building with 1,140 apartments. Because it’s a larger project, day-to-day living is usually shaped by building management systems: security procedures, elevator traffic at peak hours, parking rules and how well common areas are maintained.
Location context (what “Sen Sok” means for lifestyle)
Sen Sok is generally a “newer” part of Phnom Penh with lots of newer housing clusters and large-format retail. From Galaxy Garden, the common reference points are AEON Mall Sen Sok City (often called AEON 2) and other nearby shopping options. In practical terms, this usually means:
- easier access to supermarkets, cafés, gyms, and services without going into the riverside/CBD areas every day
- traffic patterns that can feel smoother than the inner city at some hours, but still busy at peak times (especially near major roads)
Building scale, unit mix and sizing
Galaxy Garden is marketed around six main unit “types” (commonly labeled A1, B1, J1, C1, G2, F2). The published size range is roughly 47.5 sqm up to 148 sqm, which typically covers:
- compact ****studio / 1-bedroom layouts on the smaller end
- 2-bedroom options in the mid range
- larger units toward the top end depending on layout and stack
If you’re comparing units, don’t just compare “sqm.” Look at where the balcony sits, whether the kitchen is open or enclosed and how much of the floor area is actually usable (some layouts feel bigger than the number suggests).
Facilities you should expect (and how they’re usually used)
The core shared facilities commonly listed for the project include a pool, gym, kids’ indoor zone, lobby/reception, car parking, and CCTV/security systems. In real life, these matter most in two ways:
- whether the building keeps them consistently clean and operational, and
- whether they get crowded at peak hours (bigger projects often do).
A realistic “living experience” snapshot
Because it’s a sizeable condo project, the experience can vary a lot by unit position and floor:
- Noise & dust**:** units facing main roads can feel noisier; higher floors typically reduce street noise.
- Heat & sunlight: west-facing units can get hotter in the afternoon; check shading and balcony depth.
- Elevator waiting time: bigger buildings can mean longer waits during morning/evening rush so it is worth testing when you view.
- Parking: if you own a car, confirm what parking is included (or paid) and how access works.
What to clarify before you buy (or rent)
A quick checklist that saves headaches later:
- Title type (strata title/freehold details and what exactly transfers)
- Management fees: what’s included (security, common area maintenance, pool/gym access)
- Utilities: how electricity/water are metered and billed
- Rules: pets, short-term stays, renovations, move-in/out procedures
- Furniture list: “fully furnished” can mean very different things ask for an itemized list and photos
Who this project tends to suit
In a neutral sense, this kind of Sen Sok condo typically fits:
- people who spend a lot of time in north/west Phnom Penh (Sen Sok / nearby districts)
- buyers who want a newer-area lifestyle with big retail close by
- owners looking at rental demand from tenants who prioritize malls, supermarkets and easy road access