Questions About Building Home Pool

Former Member
Former Member
Hi All, First time poster here, so please excuse any unfamiliarity with submission etiquette or duplication. I am looking into building a pool at my home that would include two 25-yard swim lanes. A few issues have arisen and I need some advice. First, I want to have an overflow gutter system, like I have seen at many competition pools, but cannot find anyone who will install that system in a residential pool. Does that sound right? Making matters worse, I cannot find anyone who will install anything other than a flat wall, i.e., no "inside the wall" gutter system. Assuming that the flat wall is my only option, please let me know if you think it will be sufficient for wave dampening purposes if I have lane lines between the lanes and next to the walls. I am concerned that the wave reflection off of the walls will result in buffeting that will make swimming for long periods of time difficult. Second, I am planning on 6-foot wide lanes and could lose a few inches to the lane lines. Do you think 5'6" wide lane lines is sufficient for 3 folks in a lane or should I make sure I have at least 6'? Third, the installer is recommending a salt sanitation system instead of old-fashion chlorine. Does anyone have any experience with salt systems? Salt water is typically more buoyant, which sounds good to me. Also, I am more sensitive than others to chlorine, so this alternative sounds attractive. But I am not familiar if there are any drawbacks. Thanks for any input into the above or any other suggestions about building a home pool.
Parents
  • I had a salt water system on my outdoor pool in Arizona and it worked beautifully. I guess it depends on the climate. I've swum in several outside pools that were salt water. One that I remember specifically was in Sydney, Australia: https://www.abcpool.org/ Probably a few others in Australia, and I think elsewhere too. Actually I don't think I've ever swum in an indoor pool that was saltwater (instead of chlorine), but I much prefer swimming outside. :) My house has a huge yard, and I've thought of putting in a pool. Neighbors who have put in smaller play pools say the cost has been around $30-40k, which seems a bit absurd, at least compared with Arizona (our pool there was about $10k). But they need to do a hard dig to get out some major rock here, where I guess AZ had better soil for pool building. I'll definitely give you a shout if I do put one in. I'd want (and could easily put in) 2 lanes x 25m.
Reply
  • I had a salt water system on my outdoor pool in Arizona and it worked beautifully. I guess it depends on the climate. I've swum in several outside pools that were salt water. One that I remember specifically was in Sydney, Australia: https://www.abcpool.org/ Probably a few others in Australia, and I think elsewhere too. Actually I don't think I've ever swum in an indoor pool that was saltwater (instead of chlorine), but I much prefer swimming outside. :) My house has a huge yard, and I've thought of putting in a pool. Neighbors who have put in smaller play pools say the cost has been around $30-40k, which seems a bit absurd, at least compared with Arizona (our pool there was about $10k). But they need to do a hard dig to get out some major rock here, where I guess AZ had better soil for pool building. I'll definitely give you a shout if I do put one in. I'd want (and could easily put in) 2 lanes x 25m.
Children
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