A quick description of my scenario.

Questions – again – I hope you can help me here.
Thank you very much for your time.
Todd
- Vinyl pool with hole dug and 48 inch steel walls are going up in a couple days. Currently great dry weather.
- The top of the pool will be a couple inches above grade at the higher point of my grade and a foot above at the other lower side of grade.
- Crazy heavy clay and the dig was painful.
- The deep end has about 2 inches of water that seems to be self-replenishing the evaporated water with slow seepage from the clay around and above the pool bottom.
- I have asked my builder to provide stone for backfill but crushed rock with sharp edges would have been about $6k extra. My excavator found me a great deal on what we in Michigan refer to as 6A washed stone ¾ to 1 inch. This stone does not have many sharp edges like crushed which I know would have been preferable.

- The builder knows I had an awful history of floating liners at my last house and it is a MAJOR concern for me with this project.
Questions – again – I hope you can help me here.
- Am I making things worse with the type of stone I have chosen for backfill or am I still way better off than sand?
- Can deck cement be poured right over the top of this material? PB thinks they will want to put sand over the rock and then pour. This seems odd to me.
- Should I lead away from this backfill area to low points on my well graded but heavy clay yard using a couple French drains or just a solid pipe from the backfill area? Or is this not really necessary at all?
- My builder suggested I stick with sand - no drainage French or otherwise - and install a sump in the bottom of the deep end with flex pvc to a valve up top and powered by the pool pump. This seems too manual to me and susceptible to human error on when to engage it. I told him I would pay for that but would consider it the very last line of defense if all the other mitigations listed fail and not as a primary solution. Am I on the right track or am I being ridiculous?
Thank you very much for your time.
Todd