Mari

Built-in saltwater pool in a rural garden

A rectangular built-in saltwater pool sits low in the garden, framed by white masonry and a broad terrace in natural stone. The long, straight lines give the water a clear outline, while the pale wall behind it keeps the scene open. At one side, a wooden pool pavilion with glazed walls and a dark tiled roof marks the edge of the outdoor area and gives the composition a second layer.

Rectangular lines and a measured pool size

The pool measures 1000 x 500 x 150 cm, which gives it a strong, elongated profile. That proportion is easy to read in the photographs: the basin stretches across the garden with a calm, rectangular shape and a fixed waterline. Inside, the white 1.5 mm reinforced liner keeps the interior visually quiet, letting the blue surface and the straight coping lines do most of the work. It is an in-ground pool, but the setting keeps it visually light.

The built-in saltwater pool is not left to stand alone. A white retaining wall runs along the perimeter and defines the garden edge, while planting softens the junction between masonry and paving. The result is a clear outdoor room rather than a loose arrangement of deck and water. From above, the geometry becomes even more obvious: water, wall and terrace form a sequence of parallel bands.

Natural stone around the water

Natural stone paving surrounds the pool and extends into seating areas along the sides. The surface reads as one continuous terrace, yet the joints and tones of the stone keep it grounded. It is the kind of material that works by staying in the background. The pool edge stays crisp against it, and the darker blue water gives the terrace a sharper line in return. In this rural garden pool, the hard surfaces are doing the framing, not competing for attention.

Seen from the side, the terrace sits close to the water and leaves just enough room for circulation and seating. The stone also brings the pavilion into the same visual language, so the pool area does not split into separate parts. Even without decorative excess, the space feels complete because the materials repeat: stone underfoot, masonry at the edge, glass and wood at the far end. That repetition keeps the eye moving from one zone to the next.

A white retaining wall that sets the border

The white retaining wall is one of the clearest elements in the project. It runs behind the pool like a clean horizontal line and separates the water zone from the rest of the garden. In some views, the wall acts almost like a backdrop for the blue basin and the planting in front of it. Its pale surface reflects light and makes the darker stone terrace appear deeper by contrast.

Small details in the wall keep it from becoming anonymous. The masonry joints, the regular height and the rhythm of the edge all reinforce the rectangle of the pool. Rather than closing the space in, the wall gives the garden structure. That is important here, because the surrounding setting is open and rural; the wall creates a visual boundary without cutting off the view to the pavilion and the rest of the garden.

A wooden pavilion beside the pool

At the far side of the terrace, a wooden pool pavilion introduces a different material register. Its glazed walls make it read as a sheltered room rather than a closed annex, and the dark tiled roof anchors it to the ground. The timber structure contrasts with the masonry around the pool, but it does so quietly. It adds height at the edge of the terrace and gives the pool area a clear destination when seen from across the garden.

The pavilion also changes how the space is used. From the images, it appears as a place to sit close to the water while remaining under cover, with the glazing keeping the view open to the pool. That relationship between enclosure and transparency suits the project well. The structure does not dominate the garden; it sits beside the built-in saltwater pool and completes the edge of the outdoor composition.

Light at the waterline after dark

Warm white LED pool lighting is listed among the pool’s features, and its effect belongs to the same restrained palette as the rest of the project. The lighting is not used as a theatrical element here. Instead, it is part of the pool’s basic reading at the waterline, where light, tile and surface meet. In a setting with masonry, stone and wood, that softer tone makes sense. It keeps the basin legible without interrupting the calm geometry.

The built-in saltwater pool also includes a lamella cover, Jetstream and automatic disinfection, along with an AFM filter installation, a full inverter heat pump and solar mention in the source. These are technical components, but they are presented here as part of the pool’s equipment rather than as visual statements. The design remains the main story: a rectangular pool, direct lines, durable materials and a setting that lets each element hold its place.

What the garden sequence does

What stands out most is the way the garden is composed in layers. First comes the stone terrace, then the white retaining wall, and then the pavilion with its glazed sides. The pool sits in the middle of that sequence and ties it together. From one angle the water reads wide and open; from another, the wall and pavilion compress the space and make the terrace feel more enclosed. That shift gives the project depth without adding extra elements.

Because the basin is rectangular and the materials are limited, the whole setting stays easy to read. There is no need for ornament when the proportions are this clear. The water surface, the pale wall, the stone paving and the wooden structure already provide enough contrast. Together they turn a practical built-in saltwater pool into a composed garden setting where the route around the water, the edge details and the sheltered seating area all relate to one another.

From terrace to shelter

Seen in plan and in perspective, the project works through clean edges rather than gestures. The in-ground pool is set into a broad terrace, the retaining wall marks the border, and the pavilion gives the garden a focal point at one end. The white liner inside the basin keeps the interior bright enough for the blue water to stand out, while the stone surface outside keeps the ground plane visually steady. It is a straightforward composition, but the materials give it enough variation to stay interesting across different viewpoints.

For readers looking at built-in pools, saltwater pools or a rural garden pool with a wooden pool pavilion, this project is a clear reference. It shows how a rectangular pool, natural stone paving and a white retaining wall can be combined with a glazed timber structure without overcrowding the space. The result is a restrained outdoor setting where each part is visible, useful and easy to understand from the first glance.

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