Glass pool enclosure
Glass meets water first here. The pool sits beneath a clear roof structure, where repeated metal members draw a steady line overhead and let the room read as both enclosure and garden room. Along the sides, large glazed panels keep the boundary thin, so the reflections on the water stay visible while the interior remains sheltered.
Indoor pool under a glass roof
The indoor pool with glass roof is the most immediate part of the project. Light lands on the water, then runs across the floor and the dark wall surfaces around it. The structure above is visible rather than hidden: slim repeated supports, transparent infill, and a rhythm that gives the space its pace. This is a glass pool enclosure that shows how much can be done with restraint.
Planters sit close to the edge of the room, bringing a line of green into the glazed volume. Their placement matters because it breaks up the hard surfaces without interrupting the view. Through the panels, the garden stays present, and the pool room feels tied to the outside while still holding a clear, contained shape.
Glazed enclosure with a measured rhythm
From one side, the glazed enclosure reads as a sequence of frames. The repeated members in the roof and the long panes below set a calm order, but the effect is not rigid. Openings, sliding panel structure, and reflections soften the geometry. In portfolio terms, it is the kind of pool enclosure project where the construction itself becomes part of the visual story.
The long glazed façade continues that idea outside the main pool volume. It stretches along the building line with a roof plane that reads as one continuous move rather than a broken composition. Seen beside the trees and planted edges, the glazing pulls the eye forward and keeps the extension light in appearance, even when the interior materials turn darker.
Glazed garden room beside the pool
What makes the adjoining room read as a glazed garden room is the way it holds both openness and enclosure. The glazing is broad, the roofline is low and linear, and the connection to the garden remains direct. This is not a decorative conservatory effect. It is a measured, built space that uses glass to extend the plan and keep the exterior legible from inside.
Outside, the path beside the glass is made of brick and tile paving laid in a clear pattern. It guides movement along the façade and creates a steady edge against the planting. That route matters as much as the building line itself, because it shows how the project is experienced on foot: glass to one side, garden to the other, and a hard surface holding the passage between them.
Dark natural stone interior and recessed wall planes
Inside the darker room, the palette shifts quickly. A dark natural stone interior wall catches the light in a rougher way than the glass does, and the contrast gives the space depth. Rectangular recesses cut into the wall add shadow, while the surrounding surfaces stay restrained. The room feels more enclosed here, but not heavy. The stone wall gives the interior a fixed point.
The floor below carries the same muted register, with a dark mineral or tiled finish that keeps attention on the vertical surfaces and the water beyond. Nothing competes for notice. Instead, the project uses a small number of materials—glass, metal, stone, brick, and tile—to separate the zones clearly. That spareness is what makes the transitions easy to read.
Stone, glass and a few precise openings
The rectangular openings in the dark wall are small but important. They break the surface without making it busy, and they echo the more regular framing of the glazing outside. Across the room, the stone wall and the glass enclosure answer each other: one opaque and rough, the other transparent and reflective. Together they shape a space that changes character as you move through it.
Seen from the pool side, the dark surfaces keep the reflections in check and make the water stand out. Seen from the garden side, the same enclosure reads lighter, because the glass catches the sky and the planting. That shift is one of the strongest features of the project. The architecture changes with viewpoint, but the frame stays consistent.
A long glazed extension set into the garden
The exterior images show a long glazed extension with a steady roof profile and a clear relationship to the trees and planting around it. The glass line runs parallel to the path, and the paving helps anchor the building against the ground. The result is a measured edge between built form and garden, with enough transparency to keep the interior visible from outside.
Along the water and planting zones, the glazed garden room and the pool enclosure project share the same language of repeated frames and clean surfaces. The stone, the brick paving, and the glass are all easy to read at a glance. For anyone looking through portfolio pages of pool enclosure projects or indoor pool architecture, this project offers exactly that: a built example where enclosure, room, and garden are set out with clarity and without excess.
Photography: ARHK architects
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