Completing a major home improvement project is a lot like building a house itself. How you start—the foundation you build—bears greatly on your final project outcome.
When it comes to adding a swimming pool to your property, the same is true. That’s according to Blue Haven Pools, a leading pool contractor. Experts with the company highlight three key considerations to nail down at the outset when embarking on a new pool.
First, consider how large you want your pool to be. Don’t allow dimensions to become an afterthought, as you may come to regret it down the road.
Imagine having a newly done pool and taking a dip in it for the first time with your family members. Your aquatic retreat looks great, but you suddenly realize that with one child swimming across the pool, two others splashing around in the shallow end with your spouse, and you trying to relax on the tanning ledge, it may feel surprisingly crowded.
Extra space would have been much better for accommodating everybody and his or her individual activities. Among pool buyers, Blue Haven’s specialists say that the leading “do-over wish” is larger pool dimensions.
Second, consider where the pool entry goes and its configuration. Pool buyers often miss the important nature of steps—where they are built, as well as their style and dimensions.
Their arrangement and position play a larger role than you might imagine. For example, poorly placed ones can obstruct a lap swimmer’s path and disrupt his or her routine.
Steps can also provide an opportunity to include an increasingly popular pool feature, a tanning ledge (also called a sun shelf). Ask your builder about creating a first step that does double duty as this functional feature.
If seniors or those with mobility challenges may be using your pool, consider making the steps wider; they offer more space for an easier foothold for greater balance.
Third, think about whether a pool alone will provide maximum use and enjoyment for your family; with the wonderful hydrotherapy its jets and warm water deliver, perhaps a spa would be an excellent addition as well.
If you decide to include a relaxing spa with your pool, take advantage of the design opportunities it provides as well.
For example, have your contractor build the spa elevated—higher than the pool. Doing so allows for a spillover that creates a sleek water feature above your pool’s surface.
Starting your pool project off right is as easy with help of a qualified pool designer. Along with the factors outlined here, your designer will carefully review a number of decorative options and functional feature that suit your family’s lifestyle.
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