An immersive pavilion designed as a "Flow Field" capturing dynamic energy and continuous motion, where repetitive modular elements transform into one continuous fluid structure inspired by ocean waves, natural topography, movement and rhythm.
The pavilion shifts architectural language from static forms toward embodied fluidity, where the structure appears to be in a constant state of transition. The main design idea is that many individual units can merge into a unified form while maintaining their identity. The concept development follows three steps: basic cylindrical module as a repetitive element, height variation creating fluid rhythm, and form generation where modules align to form a continuous wave. The structure uses UV-resistant PVC tubes of 0.20m diameter with variable heights, set on a natural stone paving base with pebble stone infill transition, warm white LED strip lighting, and a concrete foundation.
Construction uses a concrete base with embedded steel sockets for fixing. PVC pipes are cut into varying heights forming modular units, installed vertically using steel rods and adhesive fixing. Arrangement follows a parametric layout to create a continuous flowing form. Hidden steel supports are added for stability where needed. The structure is finished with weather-resistant coating and sealed top caps. Pavilion dimensions are approximately 10M length, 6M width, and 4M height. Maquette materials include cylindrical cardboard straws, corrugated fiberboard, extruded polystyrene foam, reconstituted synthetic stone, crushed granite aggregate, and adhesive fixing wax.