Cricket pavilion
A cricket pavilion is a pavilion at a cricket ground. It is the main building within which the players usually change in dressing rooms and which is the main location for watching the cricket match for members and others. Pavilions can vary from modest and purely practical buildings at small venues to large and imposing edifices at some of the historic grounds where Test cricket is played.
Historic pavilions
The pavilions at Lord's Cricket Ground and The Oval are typical of the Victorian architectural style often seen at most famous English grounds. The cricket pavilion in the University Parks at Oxford was designed by the leading Victorian architect Sir Thomas Graham Jackson. Other famous historical pavilions are Old Trafford and the Members Pavilion at the Sydney Cricket Ground. Entry is only enabled for members. Their seats are reserved by a member or player. A non-member is not entitled to enter the Members Pavilion.
- The Victorian pavilion at The Oval, London
- The pavilion at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, Manchester
- The historic Members Pavilion at the Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney
- The pavilion (right of centre) at Trent Bridge, Nottingham
- Bombay Gymkhana pavilion, Mumbai
- Germantown Cricket Club pavilion, Philadelphia, United States
- Junction Oval pavilion, Melbourne
Modern pavilions
Amongst the most distinctive of modern pavilions is that named after Sir Garfield Sobers at the Kensington Oval in Barbados. Other modern pavilions are those at the Rose Bowl in England and the Brabourne Stadium in India.
- The Sir Garfield Sobers pavilion at Kensington Oval, Barbados
- Providence Stadium pavilion, Guyana
- The Rose Bowl pavilion, Southampton
- Brabourne Stadium pavilion, Mumbai
- Edgbaston Cricket Ground pavilion, Birmingham
- St George's Oval pavilion, Port Elizabeth
Alternatives
Dugouts or benches are generally used instead of pavilions in Twenty20 cricket. The dugout or bench is located just off the field of play, allowing players to enter and exit the field of play more quickly in comparison to a pavilion, therefore maintaining the faster pace of that form of the game (a batsman must be on the field within 90 seconds, rather than within the three minutes allowed in other forms of cricket, for not be given out, timed out) .