Inspired by Wikipedia's article on pentagonal tiling, I made my own attempt.
I believe this belongs to the 4-tile lattice category, because it's composed of pentagons pointing towards 4 different directions. According to Wikipedia, 3 out of the 15 currently discovered types of pentagonal tiling belongs to the 4-tile lattice category (type 2, 4 & 6).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentagonal_tiling
I don't think my attempt is an instance of type 4 or 6, since in both type 4 & 6, any side of all pentagons overlaps with only one side of another pentagon, while in my attempt, half of the long sides overlap with two shorter sides.
At the same time, I can't figure out how my attempt is an instance of type 2... Please kindly offer your insight.



As answered on Mathoverflow, where Jacky silently cross-posted this question
There are two questions here:
Q1) Which convex pentagons tile the plane?
Q2) What are all tilings of the plane by copies of a single convex pentagon?
The Wikipedia page you cite concerns Question 1 (though it could make this more explicit); Q1 is contained in Q2, and likely more tractable: once we know that a pentagon tiles the plane, it might still be hard to describe all tilings.
That is the case for your pentagon, which has two parallel sides and is thus contained in Type 1. It is a special case of Type 1 that allows further tilings such as the one you found, but that's a Q2 distinction and doesn't affect Q1.