The Honey Bee Landscape Pavilion is situated in an uninhabited wooded area just off the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia. A proposal for the Honey Makers Association of America, the site incorporates areas for the organizations’ corporate and industrial (honey making) programs as well as public gathering, cafe, and event spaces. As the faceting forms a formal connectivity between each space and level, the interior circulation creates a continuous programmatic loop, allowing for the integration of the public into each program. This continuum serves as a feedback loop in programmatic function and social interaction. As the visitors enter the building and are drawn through the public space from activity node to activity node, public programmatic mixing spaces form the connective paths between the organized functions. Situated at the top of a hill, the honey reserve unfolds down the hill, leading to the apiary 300’ feet from the public spaces. Though there are shortcut paths between programs, the ease of the primary ramp system promotes meandering by the visitors and the resultant integration of required functional programs and flexible public spaces.