What a beautiful build! I love your choices of materials, especially the glass tile. I am having major pool envy! Can't wait to see the finished product.
The first construction issue was encountered today. The inside of retaining wall coping was supposed to align perfectly with the outside of spa coping.
This would make things perfectly linear when the steps go in on each side.
The pool builder brought to my attention yesterday that they missed by 5 inches.
The root cause is that the spa was built too deep.
The solution is to build up the back wall of the spa with concrete, pop the rear coping and set it in to align with retaining walls. This will also involve chiseling into the bench to reset one of the in floor jets. Pool builder assures me it's no problem.
Does anyone see any issues with this?
Not sure how I feel about this, but builder did bring it to my attention and offered to make it right. I just want to make sure there aren't any structural concerns with his proposed fix.
The downside here is the internal dimensions of spa go from 9x7'3" to 9x6'11". Not a huge deal, I guess
The other solution would be to do nothing and accept the fact that retaining walls will not align perfectly with spa coping.
Attached is an overhead 2d which illustrates the straight line across retaining walls and spa coping.
And technically, a third solution is to demo the sections of retaining wall on each side and move them back 5 inches - PB does not like this option for obvious reasons $$$
The question is how much of a perfectionist are you? Will you be happy with any alternative or will you always look at it and wish it was exactly as you had envisioned? I'm sure you paid a pretty penny for it, my gut says it should be redone.
I would leave the spa as is and also leave the coping as is. I wouldn't give up 4" of the spa space. I'd pull your two decking steps back to start a step's depth prior to the spa on the sides and the top step would then have an inside corner as it reaches the spa. I would do this so as not to lose depth on the -24" elevation level between the steps and the pool. That space is already not overly large and could be a bottleneck when people are standing around if the steps were to extend in 5" more. It's a simple solution and I don't see any aesthetic issue with the walls not lining up. Overlaps are common in architecture.
I would definitely not cut the coping down to a different width than the sides. I think that would really stand out. If it were mine I would leave it as is. But if it would bother you in the long run go with option 1.
Thanks for the opinion guys - Builder is going to build the offset into the 3d model tomorrow so I can see it and make a decision on how to move forward
I was not aware that you were getting this. Just for others following this thread, there is no need for this on a typical residential outdoor swimming pool.
Decided to add a shade arbor, outdoor kitchen, and fire pit to the scope of the project. Pool builder was nice enough to let me deal directly with the sub, so I feel like I got a decent deal.
It was better to do this now as the shade arbor pillars would need to be built into the retaining walls and concrete peers installed prior to decking
The rendering shows the placement of the columns for the cedar arbor
This addition will also address the coping alignment issue detailed in a previous posts. The columns in the center will sit 5 inches onto the spa coping but will line up perfectly with the columns on the retaining walls. This will take the eye away from the issue of the spa coping not aligning exactly with the retaining wall coping
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