We just had our rear deck re-done, including a new pool, we kept the hole and replaced everything else. The pool was re-configured to assume a more-modern layout. All new piping, new shot-crete or whatever it's called, new diamond-brite, new electrical, new tile, and new Turkish marble sand-blasted deck. There used to be a screen room, but Andrew damaged that and it was scrapped, and no replacement. We added a spa at the deep end, w/a spillway into the pool.
We added a pool heater, which allows us to enjoy the pool around the calendar. Previously, probably sometime in early November, we would be out of pool-use until perhaps late April. I did perform a ritual ablution early in January, when I'd put on a 'shorty' wetsuit and use the pool for a few minutes, in the new year, but w/no heater, we would need to wait until April's temperate weather warmed the pool sufficiently-enough for use. My blood has thinned significantly since I lived close to the shore of Lake Ontario. Back then, if the lake got to 70 degrees in the shallows, that was 'warm-enough' to go in until your teeth started to chatter and then the lake-shivers drove you to abandon your time in the water.
Without the pool heater, once the pool temperature dropped to below 80 degrees, that was the end of pool time here in So. FL. I'm looking forward to the winter temperatures, so we can enjoy the pool even on those days when you're forced to wear a sweater outside. I did see it snow here in So. FL, when I was working on fire-rescue. I have a claim to fame that I am one of a handful of surviving firefighters in So. FL who fought a structure fire in the snow. It was a Dade County pine structure, and that stuff is so-dense that attempting to drive a 16d brite nail is difficult unless you drill a starting hole. That gives you a better chance of sinking the nail w/o having it buckle before the nail head is set. The amount of resin in Dade County pine is impressive, and it causes the fire to burn hotter, and you could see the resin oozing out of the wood, spitting and popping, and almost as if the wood was some infernal substance from beyond the gates of hell.
The spa is plumbed so it can be heated independent of the pool, and there's an aerator pump that causes the water in the spa to look like a scene from some Ray Harryhausen movie, maybe
Jason and the Argonauts. Our golden retriever puppy loves to bite at the roiling water, and she's getting used to being in the pool. I've been teaching her to swim to the shallow end where she can exit the pool unaided, via the three full-pool width steps we now have. She also likes to walk-across the spillway from the spa into the pool, getting her paws wet, and tasting the water.
I insisted that the pool installation be done with unions, for ease of replacement of the equipment.
The pool and deck work is done and we had the slim backyard turf area re-sodded, with sprinklers. Now it's a dog run for the puppy, an L-shaped area she loves to tear-around, back and forth, so-quickly!
We already have had our first pool equipment repair. The air release valve on top of the cartridge pool filter snapped-off when I was rinsing out the new filter cartridge, which looks to be the same manufacturer as yours, but taller. I debated about replacing it with a new filter, but even Amazon Prime had way-high pricing on them, discouraging me from taking that route. I came-up with a replacement strategy for just the air bleed valve, and it's working well. I think it cost me less-than $20, and what was once a plastic thumbscrew is now a stout brass and stainless steel 1/4-turn ball valve.
kay mcconnell said she did a similar repair, so I'm in good company on coming up with a cheap, effective solution which vents air quicker, and should last longer than me.
Removed the rest of the rubber steps, washed the (left side) previously hidden parts. Washed the rubber steps. Still need to remove tape & adhesive residue from running boards & rubber steps. Now too hot to do anything else today (at 9.18am)
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We also kept our Pent Air variable-speed, programmable pump, the second of those we've had. The first I bought at Pinch-A-Penny, and it was the price of a decent used car when I was a young adult. When that took a **** after ~10 years, I bought one off Amazon Prime, and it was about 56% of the cost of the first one. Same model, updated over the years.
A favorite feature of the pool refurbishment was to remove the Hayward chrome 'eyeball' underwater pool light bucket, and to replace it with LED lights, which are programmable for a variety of colors and effects. We have 3 sets of the LED lights, and it's great fun to watch the colors at night.
We also switched to a Pent Air salt system for chlorine and I am glad to not have to carry those 2-1/2 gallon plastic containers back and forth, now it's 40 lb bags of salt. It's doing a good job of keeping the pool in-balance, and you can 'read' what's needed, when it's needed by the LED lights on the chlorine generator.
One of the disappointing things was that it took the city 14 months to approve our plans, which were sealed by a professional engineer (P.E.) as they require. It was a re-model of an existing pool, and apart from the pool heater, the new LED lighting and the aerator for the spa, the equipment was the same. All new plumbing but we kept the use of two skimmers, where code allows just one. The skimmers and their plumbing were new. We also have a dedicated port for the Hayward Navigator pool cleaner we use.
The pool contractor was great, a small businessman who kept us informed at every step. I did a bit of work on the pool during the construction, under the supervision of the pool contractor. One positive thing was that since we signed a contract, we paid a set price, despite price increases for material during our extended project. The contractor told us that if he would be pricing our job today, the cost would be about 50% more than we were paying, under contract. A task I did which saved us a bit of $ was to pressure-clean the Turkish marble deck we had installed. Then it got sealed with a gritty non-skid clear sealant.
An interesting part of the project was the installation of the Turkish marble, which was sandblasted for less-chance of slipping on a wet deck. I had specific instructions for the pitch of the deck, and we wanted the rain run-off to drain away from the house, where we have an 18 ft nanawall
https://www.nanawall.com/glass-walls/folding?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=branded&utm_term=nana wall&gad_source=1&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIw5fJ-57eiAMVKTfUAR1wviF1EAAYASABEgLQYfD_BwE folding impact glass door system. I also didn't want rain water to drain into the pool. Because of the multiple eaves overhangs, it's nearly-impossible to have gutters along the entire roof at the pool deck. So far, the way the crew did the marble tile pitch, rainwater drains away from the edge of the pool for about a foot & a half, and then it runs to the backyard grass or the side yard grass. If you look at it, you can't tell it's pitched like that, but what we have is a very shallow gutter system which is very effective in not allowing drainage into the pool, or backwards towards the house. The Turkish marble tile is set onto a bed of sand, which is on a slab of concrete beneath the sand.
The grandkids love the pool, and I'm the primary beneficiary of the completed project, along with our golden retriever puppy.