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Swimming pools

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Looking at houses ( 4 / 5 bed detached - rural part of the country)

Came across a couple I liked yesterday ... until I realised they have swimming pools in back garden. Not fancy covered ones but open air - the sort you can use on about 2 days a year :eek:

The agents make a big deal of them but just wondered if others find them as much of an offput? do they increase / decrease the value of the house?

If we really like the house , what can be done with the pool? Can they filled in / removed / turned into a giant water feature??
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Comments

  • 00ec25
    00ec25 Posts: 9,123 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    Flugelhorn wrote: »
    , what can be done with the pool? Can they filled in / removed / turned into a giant water feature??
    yes of course they can. Exactly what a neighbour of ours did when they retired and decided the maintenance cost was too much on a (modest) 7m x 5m pool. It is now a bit of lat lawn.
  • LandyAndy
    LandyAndy Posts: 26,377 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts
    I hate the things. I wouldn't even look at a house that had one unless the price reflected the cost of removing it entirely.
  • Davesnave
    Davesnave Posts: 34,741 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 10 September 2019 at 8:40AM
    Many people do works in the house and garden landscaping with a new property. Below-ground pools make a great place to bury some of the carp. Obviously, one has to be selective about what goes in.

    Or would people rather pay for skips? £280 for 6m3 round my way. :eek:
    Edit:

    I'd love one for a sunken garden. Just the job when the chilly winds are cutting across the hills on otherwise nice evenings.
  • it's not always as simple as just filling it in, it's costly and can become problematic.

    Ours was 30 ft x 15 .. 4ft at shallow end and 9ft at deep end . We turned into a salt water pump as chlorine was just horrid.

    For me a swimming pool would put me totally off, ours was heated and the costs were astronomic and maintenance was a complete hassle...never would I entertain one be it indoors, out or not heated , never again
  • Flugelhorn
    Flugelhorn Posts: 7,293 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    Can imagine might get pricey filling it in
  • Davesnave
    Davesnave Posts: 34,741 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 10 September 2019 at 10:05AM
    it's not always as simple as just filling it in, it's costly and can become problematic.
    In what way costly? We filled a swimming pool sized hole with rubble here, but if we hadn't had enough, I know we could have found more!


    I think it depends on specifics, and I can understand there will be more problems in suburbia than where I am, but location wasn't stated. It's not an automatic 'no.'

    There again, in suburbia, a pool may be seen as an asset. They don't have wild swimming, like we do!
    P1030528.jpg
  • Ithaca
    Ithaca Posts: 269 Forumite
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Posts
    Davesnave wrote: »
    Below-ground pools make a great place to bury some of the carp.
    I would imagine the carp probably prefer to have the water left in!
  • Vegastare
    Vegastare Posts: 1,009 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Name Dropper
    Well a previous manager bought house with open pool and was really bragging about how we would have a great office party etc...then reality hit with her fuel bill...seem it was on a business tariff because of higher than normal domestic usage....she then had some on going dispute with utility company.

    But many years ago friends bought a house with pool and right from day one they knew they were going to fill it in.

    I guess it is down to each person choice...
  • It depends what it was built in, ours was full on clay .
  • Slithery
    Slithery Posts: 6,046 Forumite
    Eighth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    Underground bunker perhaps?
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