Yeah I think you’re right. Will go on the lookout for a liner company to field measure (I don’t have any steps, but I always hear measuring to get those things just right is a pain.) Or I’ll put on redgaurd, hydroban, etc and tile it, if I can find a decent tile.Plaster needs to be laid down in one day and then, depending on the plaster type, the pool needs to be filled within a few hours of the final troweling (if aggregate exposure is required then sometimes the plaster is left overnight and the exposure is done the following morning). If it’s left for days before filling, the plaster will not properly cure and the lack of carbonate exposure from the water will not allow the plaster chemistry to happen. You risk creating a porous and weak plaster that will likely fail well before 15-20 years. You will also create lots of “cold joints” between the plaster layers which will ultimately affect appearance. This is why I suggested that you save money elsewhere in the project and not skimp on the plaster job. Paying a crew of experienced plaster applicators $8k-$12k (depends on your area) to do the job right and get you the longest possible plaster life (along with whatever warranty they’re willing to give for an unconventional pool structure) is worth it. And you save yourself days of back breaking labor hauling around mud and troweling plaster.
I honestly think you’d be much better off with a liner pool. Given your location in a cold northern mid-west climate, plaster is not really an optimal surface.
Thanks everyone for the input. Hopefully if anyone else in the future has this idea they can find this thread useful!