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Project precedents 

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This is the West Jutland Art Pavilion and 
Arne Haugen Sørensen Museum. It is  located in Videbæk, in the region of central Jutland and 
designed by the famous Danish architect Henning Larsen.  

I chose this open-air space because it was long, narrow, clean, and simple in color and pattern. For those reasons I though it would be a good precedent to potentially inspire a design to fit within a narrow alley along Downtown Dayton's 5th street.

http://www.vestjyllandskunstpavillon.dk/

This floating pavilion is part of the art exhibition ‘Odyssee’ on the Möhnesee lake, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It was designed by Studio Daewha Kang.

I really liked this design because its very out of the ordinary. Its  more of a sculpture since the everyday person cant access it from on land. But I really like the way it curves and uses rhythm and unity.  

https://www.designgallerist.com/blog/london-based-studio-daewha-kang-created-floating-pavillion/

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This is the College Park Pavilion in Dallas, Texas, designed by Architeas.

This was the first pavilion that I saw and found it to  be good inspiration for a more modern and sleek design. When I think of progression, I think of modern style, which leads me to these odd but appealing box/ geometric shaped structures.

https://architexas.com/project/college-park-pavillion/

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This is the Shell Mycelium pavilion it is a collaboration between BEETLES 3.3 and Yassin Areddia Designs. The pavilion formed part of the Kochi Muziris Biennale 2016 Collateral in India.

I chose this structure because of the curve and motion it shows. It reminds me of an old fashioned arch which seems graceful, but with this raw and uneven pavilion I feel it represents more of a funky side to the classic arch. 

https://www.archdaily.com/878519/this-pavillion-lives-and-dies-through-its-sustainable-agenda

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This structure is called SEAT Pavilion, it is an interactive architectural design created for a 2012 Flux Project. It was designed by Yong Ju Lee and Brian Brush and is located in Freedom Park Atlanta, GA.​

This structure really caught my eye because of the resourcefulness and how it took something so ordinary and made it something so unique. It inspires me in the way that it shows how I could use something normal and make it represent the platform for peace. 

https://www10.aeccafe.com/blogs/archshowcase/2012/08/14/seat-public-pavilion-in-freedom-park-at-atlanta-ga-by-eb-office-yong-ju-lee-and-brian-brush/

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