Voraakhom loved the flooding in Thailand as a child. She studied at Chulalongkorn University. She earned her bachelor's degree in landscape architecture in 2001, when she was awarded a medal for exceptional academic performance. She completed her graduate studies at Harvard University. During graduate school she co-founded the Koungkuey Design Initiative, a nonprofit design organisation that helps communities develop their neighbourhoods. She returned to Thailand in 2006.
Career
Kotchakorn has taught landscape design at Chulalongkorn University since 2010. She is founder and chief executive at Landprocess, a landscape architecture firm in Bangkok. She has been named one of Thailand's best architects, one who is fostering social change. In 2015 Kotchakorn worked on the Thailand Pavilion at the Milan Expo. The pavilion showcases the role of water in Thai agriculture. She was awarded a fellowship from The Asia Foundation in 2016. She opened the Siam Green Sky roof garden in Siam Square in 2015. In 2017 she founded the Porous City Network. Bangkok, a city of over eight million people, is only 1.5 metres above sea level. One of her goals is to increase Bangkok's resilience to climate change, especially flooding, and, to this end, she has received fellowships from Echoing Green and the Equity Initiative. She won a Chulalongkorn University design competition for a park that increases urban resilience by capturing runoff, the 28 raiCentenary Park at Chulalongkorn. The park is built on a three degree incline and contains artificial wetlands and underground cisterns that can hold one million gallons of water. Kotchakorn was inspired by King Bhumibol Adulyadej's concept of creating kaem ling, 'monkey cheeks', to capture rainwater runoff for later use. In 2019 she will open a 91 rai park at Thammasat University. In December 2019, Thammasat University's Rangsit campus opened Asia's largest urban rooftop garden. The 7,000 m2 space, designed by Kotchakorn, is designed to help offset some of the impacts of climate change, such as flooding. "Urban rooftop farms are an easy and effective climate solution, and should be the norm.", she said. The rooftop farm is open to anyone who wishes to grow rice, vegetables, or herbs according to the university. In 2018 Kotchakorn was named a TED fellow. She has written for City Green. She was part of the 2018 Global Entrepreneurship Bootcamp. In 2019, Kotchakorn was one of three Thais named by Time on its "Time 100 Next 2019" list. She was listed under the category of "Innovator".