By default, Flask looks in the templates folder in the root level of your app.
http://flask.pocoo.org/docs/0.10/api/
template_folder – the folder that contains the templates that should
be used by the application. Defaults to 'templates' folder in the root
path of the application.
So you have some options,
- rename
template to templates
supply a template_folder param to have your template folder recognised by the flask app:
app = Flask(__name__, template_folder='template')
Flask expects the templates directory to be in the same folder as the module in which it is created;
You'll need to tell Flask to look elsewhere instead:
app = Flask(__name__, template_folder='../pages/templates')
This works as the path is resolved relative to the current module path.
You cannot have per-module template directories, not without using blueprints. A common pattern is to use subdirectories of the templates folder instead to partition your templates. You'd use templates/pages/index.html, loaded with render_template('pages/index.html'), etc.