Wind-driven rain (WDR) is one of the most important boundary conditions governing the hygrothermal behaviour of building facades, which is usually numerically analysed with the so-called Heat-Air-Moisture (HAM) transfer models. In the traditional approach of HAM transfer models, WDR is implemented in a simplified manner: the total mass of all raindrops impinging on a certain surface area of a building facade during the time interval of the meteorological input data (typically 1 h) is spatially and temporally averaged and is supplied to the facade as an averaged moisture flux. However, real WDR is the sum of individual raindrops that impinge on the facade in a spatially and temporally discrete modus, and that do not only spread at impact, bu...