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View Full Version : Anyone here built a pool?


tater
06-02-11, 08:16 PM
Thinking about it for the kids. Lot is odd, interested in personal experiences as to desirable features, etc.

Growler
06-02-11, 10:50 PM
Wish I could help; I do know you're in for a project, in-ground or above-ground. Best of luck to you, mate.

NeonSamurai
06-03-11, 10:12 AM
A lot of people I have known have in the end regretted having/getting the pool.

First off they are expensive to build, and a below ground pool is not exactly DIY (most above ground ones are though). They also require constant maintenance and work (particularly if you do not want to end up with a pool full of slime). They also take up a lot of space. They are also a problem in the winter time if water freezes where you are. In most ways indoor pools are better, but even more expensive. You also may find you do not get quite as much use out of it as you would have figured.

That isn't to say there are not advantages, but I thought you may want to be aware of the numerous disadvantages.

AVGWarhawk
06-03-11, 10:54 AM
I would like to add to Neon's take concerning pools. Constant headache. Filter constantly running driving up the electric bill. The chemicals needed are expensive. Next thing you know you are spending the day cleaning the darn thing. My brother in law has a above ground pool. Swims in it maybe 2 times in the summer. His wife does not use it. His two year old almost drowned in the damn thing 3 weeks ago. Go figure, he was putting up a gate to keep the kids off the deck that services the pool because his kids have started to walk. He turned to look after her sister (he has twins) who was crying just inside the house. He returned to the gate work in about a minute. Emily was not there. He looked over the edge of the pool and she completely submerged in the water contained on the pool cover installed for the winter months. She was under for an estimated 1 minute. He had to clear her lungs and start chest compressions. She finally coughed up the dirty water and began to cry. She spend the remainder of the day at John Hopkins in Baltimore. So, needless to say, he wants the pool gone! The damn things are a lot of responsiblity and also a liability sometimes. Join a local community pool if you have one. :03:

Armistead
06-03-11, 12:19 PM
My house had a in ground pool that I later filled in. It was fun for awhile, then it was work, not to mention every kid in the neighborhood wanted to come over and swim with our kids, so you're constantly having to watch watch watch. One kid busted his head on the diving board during a party, parents didn't blame, but with laws you can be held responsible. Most states also require a high fence with new pools.

I was glad to fill it in, it was a money pit and headache. Much cheaper and funner to go to one of the public pools or large water park near us and you can leave it.

Betonov
06-03-11, 12:30 PM
If you really want a large pool to do some recreational swimming, then you'll have to build one and you inherit the headaches listed above.
If you want somewhere to soak or relax and the kids to play in then buy an inflatable one. They're cheap, easy to maintain and you can put them away for the winter

http://inflatablepoolshop.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Inflatable-swimming-pool.jpg

some of the big ones can cost to about €1000, but peanuts compared to a built one

AVGWarhawk
06-03-11, 12:31 PM
Armistead reminded me...my brother purchased a house with an inground pool. He filled it in after the first summer. It was nothing but work. :down:

Gerald
06-03-11, 12:33 PM
Yes, the pools are not cheap, :06:

Tchocky
06-03-11, 12:36 PM
Never built one. Swam in a few. PM for any more information.

AVGWarhawk
06-03-11, 12:46 PM
http://inflatablepoolshop.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Inflatable-swimming-pool.jpg



I had one of these for my kids. It sucked. Lasted a season. Damn seam split. The filter was garbage. The ladder was cheap. If it is not on level ground it will lean. Eventually it will spill over the side it leans towards. IMO, save your money.

NeonSamurai
06-03-11, 01:04 PM
Ya I agree with AVG here on the inflatables.

All in all its a heck of a lot simpler to join the local pool, or go to a water park. Also much cheaper.

BossMark
06-03-11, 01:10 PM
Blown a paddling pool up, if that helps :up:

Betonov
06-03-11, 01:21 PM
OK, no go on the inflatable :hmmm:

Buy a boat and fill it with water :DL

Gerald
06-03-11, 01:25 PM
OK, no go on the inflatable :hmmm:

Buy a boat and fill it with water :DL No,Cherry.Brandy :haha:

Betonov
06-03-11, 01:28 PM
No,Cherry.Brandy :haha:

Back foul creature of derailment, back to the beer gardens thread

Hottentot
06-03-11, 01:48 PM
Buy a boat and fill it with water :DL

We did that once. In the middle of a lake. In retrospect, you'd be surprised to learn how bonding experience it is to drag that thing across the mud bottom back to the shore with a bunch of friends. Highly recommended.

As for pools...uh, can't say much for rather obvious reasons, they are not exactly common in here. But for that very reason I too would go something season friendly, that is, an inflatable or then a pool that is not your own to begin with. The advantage of those is that you won't be stuck with them like you would be with a real pool. I'd figure that once the novelty wore off, I wouldn't use it much either. And if it is for kids, they usually tend to have even shorter attention span than I do.

tater
06-05-11, 08:53 AM
I live in New Mexico. It's been 30° C here for most of May during the day (+- 5° or so for the most part—though we've also had snow, lol—life in the mountains :) ).

Summer will be hotter. I'd say the useful pool season with a heater is May-Sept. If I used a solar heater so it is "free" to heat, I'd totally try for an early start and late close, too. Regardless, we'd have a solid 4 months of swim time.

I think those on the down side of the pool are likely correct in many ways, no question. It's an expensive proposition, and the likely cost per hour of actual swimming is a calculation I am likely to do here in the future—and I probably will not like the answer. A neighbor suggested that if we were gonna do a pool, we should enclose it so that we could at least use it year round (which would certainly help the per-use cost numbers). An inside pool is not the same though, and getting the esthetics right would be non-trivial (and expensive). I think it'd go from ~$50/square foot to well over $100 adding it as an indoor space. Though it's an intriguing idea I suppose.

I should add that part of the rationale has to do with some work we are going to have to do anyway. Our septic system is under the driveway, and dates to the 1970s. The driveway is starting to spall (it's concrete), and there is a new code requiring septics to be updated by 2015. As a result we will be forced to rip up 3000 ft^2 of concrete and replace septic anyway.

The idea was that we may as well move said septic tank a little, reverse driveway (making it about 1/2 the length---the current carport faces 180° from the street, so the drive is like a J with the bottom filled in), and put a pool in ~2/3 of the space that is currently a 1500 ft^2 slope of concrete (including patio, not a 1000 ft^2 pool!).

Dunno. The trouble is having a useful outside space in the summer in New Mexico. It gets so hot, that underwater is the only place you can be without loads of shade, and we live on the side of the mountain with little shade.

I don't think it would pay for itself property value wise, but in our neighborhood it's not a negative I think (you get to a certain range and pools start becoming very common if not expected).

NeonSamurai
06-05-11, 09:11 AM
It probably wont add anything to the property value. Also as for use estimates, I would go with about a quarter of what you estimate. People always seriously overestimate how much they will use a pool. Fully enclosing the pool is not a bad idea, as you will not need to spend as much time cleaning it, or chlorinate it as much (this assumes it is fully enclosed like a house). A lot of the work involved cleaning up leaves and other debris in the pool, and the chemicals to keep the water clean from it. Plus making it indoor makes it safer too if there are kids around.

tater
06-05-11, 09:52 AM
We'd for sure have an automatic cover (even inside), which helps a great deal in heating and keeping clean regardless.

Haven't really wrapped my head around enclosing it. I think I'd want the roof to open, which would cost an absurd about of money (more than we have to spend).

Armistead
06-05-11, 11:31 AM
Get a large hot tub with a bar....:yeah:

tater
06-05-11, 12:09 PM
Get a large hot tub with a bar....:yeah:

I already have a hot tub off our bedroom, actually. That gets used almost daily.

Gerald
06-05-11, 12:17 PM
I already have a hot tub off our bedroom, actually. That gets used almost daily. With a bar, and accessories, :O:

tater
06-05-11, 01:26 PM
Nah, I have little interest in sitting in hot water and getting drunk. Sometimes I bring a glass of ice water.

Gerald
06-05-11, 01:32 PM
Nah, I have little interest in sitting in hot water and getting drunk. Sometimes I bring a glass of ice water. It is more than enough,:yep:

em2nought
06-05-11, 09:06 PM
Build a koi pond, use it as a pool. Swim with the fishes. :D I sort of do that when I clean the filter of the koi pond that I built. If I had made the pond about a foot deeper it would almost be a pool, would have protected from the darned herons more too. Great thing about the koi pond are the mosquito fish, never get bite by mosquitoes in my yard. No chemicals to mess with either. Probably would be cheap to DIY out west if rocks are plentiful. Looking forward to eating the first tilapia soon!

tater
06-06-11, 06:10 PM
Moving the septic, and rebuilding a smaller driveway will be less than I thought (even though given where we are we need the most fancy type of septic).

Now to find out how cheap I can build an adobe garage... maybe I can do it myself (or myself helping with bricks and mud...).

flatsixes
06-06-11, 07:24 PM
We built a big in ground pool about 7 or 8 years ago when we built the new house. We had one at the old house, and only lasted a year in the new place before we decided to build another. Perhaps my circumstances are different from most: I have roughly 8 dozen children (give or take 7 1/2 dozen), each of whom has a least 56 thousand friends, and all of whom appear to live at our house. Only one summer without it convinced us that a gigantic hole in the back yard filled with water is preferable to having them all in the house.

I can attest to the fact that pools are expensive to build and maintain, and they are definitely a PITA to keep clean (particularly with hairy 3 black labs in the mix), but I still wouldn't be without one. At least when the kids and their friends are lounging about the pool my house, I know where they are and what they're doing with whom. That ain't the worst thing in the world when four of the kids are of the feminine persuasion. Plus, it's great for parties (although I never seem to get invited).

If I was to do it again, though, I would definitely go with salt water rather than chlorine or Baquacil. Far less expensive to maintain, and much more pleasant to swim in too. We'll be switching over to salt water at the end of the season, and this time I mean it!

Good luck!

Platapus
06-06-11, 07:35 PM
A lot of people I have known have in the end regretted having/getting the pool.
...

You also may find you do not get quite as much use out of it as you would have figured.



That was exactly our experience with our pool in CA. We were so excited the first year, but as the years past, our interest waned. However the maint expenses don't wane. I lived in that house for 7 years and I think we only used it for the first year. The last four years I lived there we had a cover on it 365.

The problem with having a pool is that since it is always there, it stops being something special.

And pool maint is not cheap nor effortless.

tater
06-06-11, 11:23 PM
Yeah, I'm considering a salt water chlorine generator (for those thinking it's salty like the ocean I'm being clear---8212;it is minimally salty, and uses the NaCl to make Cl constantly).

Where my house is, we have no beaches without an airline flight required. So swimming is in a pool. Public pools are a zoo. Since we have little shade, playing outside in June-August is pretty hard most of the day. It's simply too hot. A pool would give the kids something to do. We visit the grandparents a few days a week in the summer already, and the kids spend hours in the pool. Downside is that we don't feel like we should invite other kids, though having friends is exactly what the kids want.

I suppose it might be worth looking into a country club as a reality check.

How big is your pool, flatsixes? We don't have room for a huge one given the slop, huge boulders, etc.