Okay, a newbie here and somewhat new to a forum setting so please bear with me.
I have a situation that is a head scratcher for me but perhaps not for an experienced contractor or Hydraulic Engineer. I admit this is a very unusual setup and would not be my design if I had started this project from scratch so I do expect to get razzed a bit from this otherwise “professional, trades based, and experienced owner forum” at TFP but here goes.
Our house is located in a rural area of mid Missouri, so my pool resources are somewhat limited. I currently have a 12 x 24 Kayak, on ground, pool that was already installed when we purchased this country setting home a few years ago. Our rather large extended family and friends necessitated a larger pool. Not thinking about the details back then, my quick fix was to purchase an additional 16 x 32ft Kayak pool to install next to the original 12 x 24ft pool. I installed the new 16 x 32ft. pool so that the two pools are in an L shaped configuration along with new composite decking between and around them. To add to the mix, we have a rather large, in ground (in deck) kidney shaped, fiberglass, spa that's about 10ft x 7ft x 4ft deep (inside dimensions). It is also part of this whole pool setup.
I'm now looking for the best hydraulic configuration to maintain these three bodies of water. Currently, only the 12 x 24ft. pool is plumbed and filled with water. The spa and the other pool are set up and ready to connect up the plumbing. My plan is to purchase a new 250,000 BTU (or larger) propane heater for the hot tub, with the option to take the chill off the other two pools if they are colder than about 82 degrees. I also hope to use automation (at least for the hot tub) so that I could remotely heat up the hot tub from my phone, before we drive to this property on the weekends. With that in mind, the new Hayward Tristar VS 900 Omni 2HP pump with automation sounds interesting to me but I’m open.
I realize that I should have removed the existing Kayak pool and had a larger, in ground, pool put in its place when we purchased this home two years ago. At the time, it just seemed like such a waste of money since Kayak pools are not inexpensive and it was very new when we purchased this house.
I’m now at a loss on how this should all be plumbed so that I am not maintaining three bodies of water along with the work and expense of running three separate pumps and filters (not to mention the steps involved to winterize the entire system). Should I put the hot tub filter, pump, and blower on a separate system? Then plumb the two pool skimmers, drains, and returns off of a separate pump and filter? Would the water levels stay maintained? Or could all three be plumbed together with a good variable speed pump, along with the option of the heater, heating the two pools OR the spa? One pool company suggested we keep the hot tub hydraulics completely separate. Then, operate the two Kayak pools as one large pool by connecting the ends of a large (4 or 5 inch) pipe into the lower section of the walls on each pool. This would hopefully equalize the water level in each pool (if that is an issue). If we did that, should one pool draw from the other pool before going to the pump, with the returns going back into both? Or should the pump draw from both at the same time and return into both to maintain water levels?
Any thoughts, ideas, direction, or schematics that anyone would be kind enough to share, would be so greatly appreciated. As you can see, I’m somewhat at a loss for ideas. I have searched all over the internet and I cannot find any sort of schematic for two separate pools with a hot tub configuration.
Thank you in advance for your thoughts and insight.
Ken B.
Recap of Setup:
The pools are rectangle and have four foot walls. The hot tub is kidney shaped and close to 4 feet deep, with steps and seating.
(#1) Pool is a Kayak On-Ground 12 x 24’ = +7,539 Gallons (using an approx. 3.5 foot water level with 4 foot walls)
(#2) Pool is a Kayak On-Ground 16 x 32’ = +13,404 Gallons (using an approx. 3.5 foot water level with 4 foot walls)
(#3) Spa is approximately 10ft x 7ft x 4ft deep = approximately 900 gallons (approximated S.W.A.G. because of the kidney shape with steps and the seating.)
The pools and hot tub are exactly the same elevation.
Rural country setting necessitates a propane fueled heater. Or possibly a heat pump but I thought the heat rate would be too slow for a weekend use spa.

Our house is located in a rural area of mid Missouri, so my pool resources are somewhat limited. I currently have a 12 x 24 Kayak, on ground, pool that was already installed when we purchased this country setting home a few years ago. Our rather large extended family and friends necessitated a larger pool. Not thinking about the details back then, my quick fix was to purchase an additional 16 x 32ft Kayak pool to install next to the original 12 x 24ft pool. I installed the new 16 x 32ft. pool so that the two pools are in an L shaped configuration along with new composite decking between and around them. To add to the mix, we have a rather large, in ground (in deck) kidney shaped, fiberglass, spa that's about 10ft x 7ft x 4ft deep (inside dimensions). It is also part of this whole pool setup.
I'm now looking for the best hydraulic configuration to maintain these three bodies of water. Currently, only the 12 x 24ft. pool is plumbed and filled with water. The spa and the other pool are set up and ready to connect up the plumbing. My plan is to purchase a new 250,000 BTU (or larger) propane heater for the hot tub, with the option to take the chill off the other two pools if they are colder than about 82 degrees. I also hope to use automation (at least for the hot tub) so that I could remotely heat up the hot tub from my phone, before we drive to this property on the weekends. With that in mind, the new Hayward Tristar VS 900 Omni 2HP pump with automation sounds interesting to me but I’m open.
I realize that I should have removed the existing Kayak pool and had a larger, in ground, pool put in its place when we purchased this home two years ago. At the time, it just seemed like such a waste of money since Kayak pools are not inexpensive and it was very new when we purchased this house.
I’m now at a loss on how this should all be plumbed so that I am not maintaining three bodies of water along with the work and expense of running three separate pumps and filters (not to mention the steps involved to winterize the entire system). Should I put the hot tub filter, pump, and blower on a separate system? Then plumb the two pool skimmers, drains, and returns off of a separate pump and filter? Would the water levels stay maintained? Or could all three be plumbed together with a good variable speed pump, along with the option of the heater, heating the two pools OR the spa? One pool company suggested we keep the hot tub hydraulics completely separate. Then, operate the two Kayak pools as one large pool by connecting the ends of a large (4 or 5 inch) pipe into the lower section of the walls on each pool. This would hopefully equalize the water level in each pool (if that is an issue). If we did that, should one pool draw from the other pool before going to the pump, with the returns going back into both? Or should the pump draw from both at the same time and return into both to maintain water levels?
Any thoughts, ideas, direction, or schematics that anyone would be kind enough to share, would be so greatly appreciated. As you can see, I’m somewhat at a loss for ideas. I have searched all over the internet and I cannot find any sort of schematic for two separate pools with a hot tub configuration.
Thank you in advance for your thoughts and insight.
Ken B.
Recap of Setup:
The pools are rectangle and have four foot walls. The hot tub is kidney shaped and close to 4 feet deep, with steps and seating.
(#1) Pool is a Kayak On-Ground 12 x 24’ = +7,539 Gallons (using an approx. 3.5 foot water level with 4 foot walls)
(#2) Pool is a Kayak On-Ground 16 x 32’ = +13,404 Gallons (using an approx. 3.5 foot water level with 4 foot walls)
(#3) Spa is approximately 10ft x 7ft x 4ft deep = approximately 900 gallons (approximated S.W.A.G. because of the kidney shape with steps and the seating.)
The pools and hot tub are exactly the same elevation.
Rural country setting necessitates a propane fueled heater. Or possibly a heat pump but I thought the heat rate would be too slow for a weekend use spa.