The Fabriq luxury pavilion is now being offered to wealthy landowners as an aesthetic improvement that offers many applications including a turn key "alfresco luxury" compound. The Project Concept began in 1980 when Bill Wesnousky saw a Bill Moss tent and was inspired. In 1990 a church in San Francisco commissioned Moss to design a temporary church which was never built. In 1999 Wesnousky acquired the small cotton model from Moss' widow and retained fabric and glass architects to create a permanent structure of the highest quality. Today, the 575 sq. ft. Fabriq is 10' at the entry and 19' at the peak of the roof arch. Design elements include Sefar Tenara Fabric roof, polished steel framework, architectural douglas fir glu lam beam, two triangular side window walls w/frameless windows, a 16' ceramic fritted glass cathedral wall in the back of the structure and a curved glass entry with a center door and two floor-to-ceiling pivot panels that employ center pivoted spider fittings as do the frameless side windows.