Built-in swimming pool in a modern garden
The turquoise water sits tight inside a rectangular built-in swimming pool, with the terrace running straight to the edge. Around it, pale paving, clipped lawn and green planting keep the composition clear. The pool measures 900 x 400 x 150 cm, which gives the water a long, narrow presence in the garden rather than a broad ornamental shape. From several angles, the pool with covered terrace reads as one composed outdoor room.
Rectangular lines set the tone
The geometry is immediate. Straight corners, level coping and even paving joints hold the pool in place and make the waterline easy to read. The built-in swimming pool does not sit as a separate object; it is cut into the hard landscape and edged with materials that continue the same direction. That sharp edge detailing is visible in the close-up views, where the tile lines stay disciplined around the basin and the water reflects a soft blue-green tone.
The pool’s white reinforced liner, specified at 1.5 mm, sits behind that clean visual finish. It is the kind of detail you notice less as an individual material than as the surface that lets the shape stay legible. In daylight, the pool tile edge detailing becomes part of the whole composition, while the turquoise water softens the strict rectangle without breaking it.
Pool lighting and controls stay in the background
Technically, the project is equipped for daily use without adding visual noise. LED pool lighting is built into the design, and the RGB note suggests changing light conditions after dark. The automatic pool dosing system keeps the equipment discreet, away from the visual focus of the terrace. Nothing here asks for attention; the visible result is a pool that looks calm and simple, even though several systems are working behind the scenes.
That same approach carries through to the All Seasons Full Inverter heat pump, which is listed among the pool features. The equipment is part of the technical backbone of the built-in swimming pool, but the images keep the eye on the water surface, the paving and the boundary planting. For anyone scanning a modern garden with pool, this balance between visible form and hidden support is easy to read.
A solar slat pool cover finishes the waterline
The solar slat pool cover adds another practical layer to the rectangular pool. When closed, it sits flat across the water and follows the same straight outline as the basin beneath it. That makes the cover part of the geometry rather than an interruption. In a scene defined by lines, the solar slat pool cover fits neatly into the composition and preserves the clean shape of the pool.
The covered terrace extends the pool area
One side of the garden is partly sheltered by a covered terrace, and that overhead structure gives the outdoor space a different pace. The roof line is held by slim columns, including a round support that stands out against the more rigid paving below. Underneath, the terrace feels tied to the pool rather than separated from it. The pool with covered terrace lets the seating zone sit close to the water while staying visually distinct.
Wooden slat screens and green-toned panels shape the edge of the terrace, filtering views without closing the space off. They introduce vertical rhythm against the horizontal run of the pool and paving. The effect is measured, not decorative. You see the structure, the openings and the shadow lines first, then the seating area beyond. It is this layering that gives the garden depth without cluttering it.
Green borders soften the hard landscape
The planting stays simple and controlled. Lawn runs along the outer edges, and hedges form a green backdrop behind the pool and terrace. Because the hard surfaces are so precise, the planting has room to work as a soft perimeter rather than a crowded border. In the wider views, the modern garden with pool is framed by this mix of grass, hedge mass and pale paving, all arranged to keep the eye moving across open space.
The contrast between the turquoise basin and the surrounding greenery is strongest in the longer views from the lawn. From there, the pool reads as a clear rectangle set within a larger green field. The covered terrace sits to one side, while the planted boundary closes the scene without feeling heavy. It is a layout that depends on proportion: enough planting to hold the garden, enough open paving to let the pool remain the focus.
Materials that keep the composition clear
Concrete, paving and timber do most of the visual work here. The terrace surface carries the pool edge in a straight line, while the wood elements around the covered zone break the hard perimeter into smaller parts. The images also show a more industrial note in the structure: pale supports, darker wall planes and the green-toned slatted surfaces. None of it is overworked. Each material has a clear job, either to mark the edge, cover the seating area or hold the background together.
Seen from the side, the built-in swimming pool becomes a measured part of the garden plan rather than a separate destination. The water sits low in the landscape, the terrace wraps around it, and the covered area gives the setting a place to pause. With its rectangular shape, solar slat pool cover, pool LED lighting and discreet technical setup, the project stays focused on what can be seen: line, surface, reflection and the controlled edge where water meets stone.
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