The pole has totaled the wall, and shifted the deck!
Clearly I have a problem. But its not how to fix it.
No my problem is much, much worse. Its deciding how to spend the $12K (incl. deductible) the insurance has given us to replace it.
I have a used 24ft round pool - thats been sitting in a box for 2 years. Brand new wall, liner, some rusty parts but we had replaced anything that couldn't be reused. Then before we had it installed, we moved and the new house had an 18' pool with deck. The original plan was to install the new pool this year, possibly partially buried, as last year the 18' leaked like a sieve and was you know, smaller. We may have gone back with a smaller deck, hoping the pool lasted at least 10 years with a long term pie in the sky plan to hopefully be able to afford to replace it, if it failed with an inground.
Sadly before we could get around to that, we had a storm. The. Best. Storm. EVER.
However, the insurance is paying out for a brand new pool. And a brand new deck. Budget wise somewhere between 11-14K. (We had the install money saved already, plus we may get our deductible covered as the insurance company is suing the utility company).
So options are sort of like this.
Install the 24' we have in the box, no warranty of course. Installed partially buried. Reuse everything we can. Hire out carpenters to build a custom deck. Probably come in on low end of budget. But the cost of hiring the deck out is the most expensive part of the whole ordeal.
Buy a brand new almost all resin 24' or maybe 27' pool with a 60 year warranty. Install partially buried. Buy new steps because our current ones don't flow through well. Maybe buy a chlorinating system. Add lights. Build deck ourselves. (We are handy enough to do this, although we have lots of other projects in the works and really don't want to have to). Again probably come in on low end of budget. Probably have money to add other things.
Have an semi-inground pool installed - probably again 24' in this case a Rockwood 52 by Latham. The savings on pouring a small concrete splash deck over a traditional raised wooden deck almost even out. However, we would be maxing out our budget, and I already have my eye on adding even more money by adding fancy inground style steps and lights. Also if we manage to sell the 24ft in boxes, we would offset a little more of the cost. I'm not sure how much I could get for it, maybe $500-$1K.
And really I just don't know what to do for the best. It seems that if we spend 10-14K on a pool/deck now, and a fancy deck, there'll be no tearing it down in 10 years to get the in ground I would love but can't afford. It also seems foolish to go ahead and put a used pool in the ground when we are being given money to buy a new one. Now the insurance covered an 18' installed on ground and the only things I know I have to have are a bigger pool and at least a partial bury.
So I thought I'd gather opinions and thoughts from you knowledgeable folks to help figure out what is the best use of this wind-fall - pun completely intended.
A pic back in happier times...
Clearly I have a problem. But its not how to fix it.
No my problem is much, much worse. Its deciding how to spend the $12K (incl. deductible) the insurance has given us to replace it.
I have a used 24ft round pool - thats been sitting in a box for 2 years. Brand new wall, liner, some rusty parts but we had replaced anything that couldn't be reused. Then before we had it installed, we moved and the new house had an 18' pool with deck. The original plan was to install the new pool this year, possibly partially buried, as last year the 18' leaked like a sieve and was you know, smaller. We may have gone back with a smaller deck, hoping the pool lasted at least 10 years with a long term pie in the sky plan to hopefully be able to afford to replace it, if it failed with an inground.
Sadly before we could get around to that, we had a storm. The. Best. Storm. EVER.
However, the insurance is paying out for a brand new pool. And a brand new deck. Budget wise somewhere between 11-14K. (We had the install money saved already, plus we may get our deductible covered as the insurance company is suing the utility company).
So options are sort of like this.
Install the 24' we have in the box, no warranty of course. Installed partially buried. Reuse everything we can. Hire out carpenters to build a custom deck. Probably come in on low end of budget. But the cost of hiring the deck out is the most expensive part of the whole ordeal.
Buy a brand new almost all resin 24' or maybe 27' pool with a 60 year warranty. Install partially buried. Buy new steps because our current ones don't flow through well. Maybe buy a chlorinating system. Add lights. Build deck ourselves. (We are handy enough to do this, although we have lots of other projects in the works and really don't want to have to). Again probably come in on low end of budget. Probably have money to add other things.
Have an semi-inground pool installed - probably again 24' in this case a Rockwood 52 by Latham. The savings on pouring a small concrete splash deck over a traditional raised wooden deck almost even out. However, we would be maxing out our budget, and I already have my eye on adding even more money by adding fancy inground style steps and lights. Also if we manage to sell the 24ft in boxes, we would offset a little more of the cost. I'm not sure how much I could get for it, maybe $500-$1K.
And really I just don't know what to do for the best. It seems that if we spend 10-14K on a pool/deck now, and a fancy deck, there'll be no tearing it down in 10 years to get the in ground I would love but can't afford. It also seems foolish to go ahead and put a used pool in the ground when we are being given money to buy a new one. Now the insurance covered an 18' installed on ground and the only things I know I have to have are a bigger pool and at least a partial bury.
So I thought I'd gather opinions and thoughts from you knowledgeable folks to help figure out what is the best use of this wind-fall - pun completely intended.
A pic back in happier times...
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