Deleting a pool

Author
Discussion

mikeiow

5,350 posts

130 months

Wednesday 24th August 2016
quotequote all
Bunker!!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-lincolnshire-...

Do it! You know you want to.....

DrDeAtH

3,587 posts

232 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
Underground garage... Just dig a bit deeper

2gins

Original Poster:

2,839 posts

162 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
Cheers for the replies, mainly useful suggestions. I'm particularly keen on the ball pool and patio

Guess the answer on cost is 'how long is a piece of string', depends what we do with it.

Keeping it is one option but it takes up most of what would be a nice lawn, and with 2 kids (3 and infant) we think that (I) its a liability - yes we can put a fence up but the eldest is remarkably adept at climbing - takes after me - and (ii) on balance we'll get more use from a lawn than a pool. If we wanted a patch of rough grass and a patio garden, we'd just buy something in London and be done with it. Keeping it will cost £10k as we're going to want (mrs is going to want) a child-resistant cover for peace of mind.

pitchfork

279 posts

150 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
If you're the green sort, turn it into a sunken greenhouse.

condor

8,837 posts

248 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
In that case - with your children in mind - the ball pool would seem a brilliant idea. Revert to a proper pool when they're older.

tomsugden

2,235 posts

228 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all

louiebaby

10,651 posts

191 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
We went round to an Auntie's house with our 3.5 yo and 1.5 yo boys for an afternoon, and she has a pool. It's heated. Myself and the boys spent most of the afternoon in it, coming out only for a drink and the occasional burger.

Without knowing your precise situation, I'd say keep it. (Subject to making it kiddie safe, obv.) Alternatively, ours would get plenty of use out of a little skate park. Could you make a mini-velodrome?

https://utrecht2015.com/nl/artikel/red-bull-mini-d...

Another option would be a simple frame to patio level, sheeting over to keep it dry, then decking over the top, and deal with it in a couple of years.

Peanut Gallery

2,426 posts

110 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
I'll just leave this here

http://www.colinfurze.com/bunker.html

Edit, that link no longer seems to work, try this one..

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KO25JYAaJC0

(oh, it was my formatting, both work now!)

Edited by Peanut Gallery on Friday 26th August 08:36

louiebaby

10,651 posts

191 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
Peanut Gallery said:
I'll just leave this here

http://www.colinfurze.com/bunker.html
I'd love to use a spiral cellar in the sun room / dining room, that then had a passageway off the bottom that went out to the back gardenbunker. Which was completely grassed over, so no one knew it was there.

Awesome cinema room.

Hitch

6,105 posts

194 months

Thursday 25th August 2016
quotequote all
Pools are one of those things which seem like a nice idea but I've lived in loads of places around the world and even where it is very hot a lot of people fill in their pools as they don't use them and the cost and headache of keeping them usable is significant. When we lived in Africa as kids we'd use it all summer but rarely in winter. In Dubai it was the other way around. A boss of mine had his filled in in Sydney because his early teen kids never used it. I can't imagine you'd use one for more than a week or two of days in an English summer so they'd be pretty expensive days!

The suggestion about knocking it in, filling it and letting it settle a couple of times is probably the best one so far.

Dr Interceptor

7,773 posts

196 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
I run a swimming pool company, and as well as build them, we've filled a few in.

First step is to break out the floor - all of it. Otherwise you have a big tank underground that will just fill with water.



Then take down the wall by approx 300mm all the way round - hardcore in the hole.

Then fill it. Sometimes we buy in hardcore, sometimes we used large polystyrene blocks.

250mm of topsoil all over, then turf. If you want to patio it, you'll need to avoid the 'styrene, and hardcore and Type 1 the whole thing.

Cost can be anywhere from £8k to £12k plus the VAT.

battered

4,088 posts

147 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
Dr Interceptor said:
I run a swimming pool company, and as well as build them, we've filled a few in...
Cost can be anywhere from £8k to £12k plus the VAT.
Jesus. That's not for nothing.My suggestion of an inspection pit was a joke but given costs like that not so ridiculous.
The suggestions of a sunken patio are looking good.

2gins

Original Poster:

2,839 posts

162 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
Child proof covers are about the same price so it looks like my first estimates of 10k whatever we do are pretty accurate. Cheers Jensen man!

mph1977

12,467 posts

168 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
2gins said:
Cheers for the replies, mainly useful suggestions. I'm particularly keen on the ball pool and patio

Guess the answer on cost is 'how long is a piece of string', depends what we do with it.

Keeping it is one option but it takes up most of what would be a nice lawn, and with 2 kids (3 and infant) we think that (I) its a liability - yes we can put a fence up but the eldest is remarkably adept at climbing - takes after me - and (ii) on balance we'll get more use from a lawn than a pool. If we wanted a patch of rough grass and a patio garden, we'd just buy something in London and be done with it. Keeping it will cost £10k as we're going to want (mrs is going to want) a child-resistant cover for peace of mind.
drain and deck over until the children are older?

badboyburt

2,043 posts

177 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
Scaffold inside the pool, lay scaffold boards and plywood on top then lay some lazy lawn, no pool and also no mowing, has to be a win win.

SimonD

486 posts

281 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
Blib said:
This man is a genius .
Don't even need to turn it upside down. Just rent it out to some Australians.

motco

15,944 posts

246 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
tomsugden said:
That is a brilliant piece of engineering!

"No, Mr Bond! I expect you to DROWN!" biggrin

hidetheelephants

24,220 posts

193 months

Friday 26th August 2016
quotequote all
badboyburt said:
Scaffold inside the pool, lay scaffold boards and plywood on top then lay some lazy lawn, no pool and also no mowing, has to be a win win.
Wins my vote; paying £10k to fill a hole seems rather steep.

stuttgartmetal

8,108 posts

216 months

Saturday 27th August 2016
quotequote all
I'd get quite a few quotes before flinging ten g's at it
LOL

Plus VAT

Bigger LOL

Andehh

7,108 posts

206 months

Tuesday 30th August 2016
quotequote all
jdw1234 said:
Are you refurbing house? Could be a good hole to chuck rubble in.

You need to make sure you smash up the floor to let water drain.
Put on ebay & gumtree hardcore waste/rubbish disposal? Bung it all in the hole & let it settle over the winter?