Playful villa garden with pool and slide
A rectangular pool sets the pace here. Its grey edges, broad entry steps and blue water draw the eye straight through the garden, while the IPE wood deck softens the hard line between terrace and water. The result is a villa garden with pool and slide that is built around movement: a short step down to the pool, a low seat at the waterline, then a quick turn toward the slide. The house side reads just as clearly, with the dining room and covered terrace opening directly toward the swimming area.
Rectangular pool, broad steps and a clear route to the water
The pool measures 8 by 4 metres and is finished as a Monoblock pool in a muted grey tone. Across the full width, a shallow step makes entry feel generous rather than narrow, and the timber deck keeps the pool edge calm and legible. This is where the villa garden with pool and slide first shows its logic: long horizontal lines, a restrained material palette and a direct path from inside to outside. The whole composition keeps attention on the water surface, the deck boards and the clean geometry around them.
From the dining room and the covered terrace, the route to the pool is short and open. There is no break in scale or material drama; instead, the transition is carried by the terrace floor, the deck and the waterline itself. That indoor outdoor transition is one of the strongest parts of the design because it lets the garden function as an extension of the house without needing extra devices. The pool sits low, the paving stays orderly, and the edges remain easy to read from several angles.
A poolside lounge niche shaped like a sheltered pause
Along the waterline, a recessed lounge area changes the tempo. The poolside lounge niche is built as a custom seating pit with Quick dry foam and ceramic tiles, so it reads as a fixed part of the garden rather than loose furniture placed after the fact. Its shape pulls you closer to the pool while keeping a slight separation from the water edge. The sound of rippling water sits in the background, and the low walls make the space feel enclosed without shutting out the view.
The material shift matters here. Ceramic surfaces catch the light differently from the timber deck, and the upholstered sections soften the hard geometry of the setting. The seating follows the line of the pool, which makes the niche feel anchored to the water rather than added beside it. In a villa garden with pool and slide, this kind of pause point is what keeps the project from becoming only about play. It gives adults a place to sit near the action, with the blue water and grey paving always in view.
IPE wood deck around the water
The IPE wood deck frames the pool with narrow, consistent boards that contrast with the larger paving slabs nearby. Its colour sits between the grey pool finish and the greener parts of the garden, so the surface acts as a quiet middle layer. The deck also sharpens the edge of the pool, which helps the rectangular shape stay crisp from the terrace side. Seen from above, the timber creates a clear border; seen from the seating niche, it gives the pool a more relaxed perimeter.
The built-in slide turns the garden into a place for movement
The slide is the most animated element in the garden. Built into the landscape and shaped with playful curves, it is made of sprayed concrete and takes its cue from large amusement-park slides, though here it is woven into a private garden setting. It rises from the planting and stonework as a fixed form rather than a temporary play item. For younger children, it gives the garden a reason to be used beyond swimming, while the in-ground trampoline extends that same sense of movement onto the lawn.
That balance between still water and active play defines the project. The slide has a strong presence, but it does not overwhelm the pool area because its surface and shape are controlled. Around it, the hard landscaping stays calm: broad paving, a measured deck and planted edges that frame the activity instead of competing with it. The villa garden with pool and slide works because each element has a clear role. The pool holds the centre, the slide adds momentum, and the trampoline keeps the lawn part of the story.
Sand, jumping and a garden that keeps pace with children
A sand box sits among the family features, giving the garden another low, ground-level zone. It is one of the simplest elements on the site, yet it matters because it changes the way the lawn is used. Nearby, the trampoline sits flush with the ground, so it does not break the plane of the garden. Together with the slide, these pieces create a route of play that moves from sand to spring to water. The lawn remains open, but it is never just empty.
Planting, hedge and light as the final frame
A wintergreen hedge wraps the garden and gives the planting structure along the boundary. Within that frame, the mix of winter- and summer-flowering plants keeps the edges from looking fixed or sparse, while selected trees are lit as focal points after dark. The light picks out trunks and canopies against the darker hedge, and the garden changes character once the pool surface goes calm in the evening. The planting does not dominate the architecture of the garden; it supports it by holding the outer edge and softening the hard materials near the water.
On the south side, the practical parts of the garden are kept together: an outdoor shower, separate outdoor toilets for ladies and gentlemen, and a changing room. These are tucked into the overall layout so the leisure spaces can stay open. Their presence explains how the garden works in use, especially when swimming and playing take up most of the day. The plan remains easy to understand because wet zones, lounge areas and service spaces each have their own position.
Seen as a whole, the project is driven by clear contrasts: grey pool shell against blue water, timber deck against ceramic seating, planted edges against hard paving. Yet it is the details close to the ground that make the garden memorable. A wide step across the pool, a recessed seat beside the water, a slide with a bold curve, a trampoline set into the lawn. Together they give this villa garden with pool and slide its rhythm, moving from quiet sitting to active play without losing its sense of order.
Photography: ELEVEN MEDIA
Want to see more of Buro van Rooijen | Exclusive Custom Gardens? View the page of Buro van Rooijen | Exclusive Custom Gardens for even more great projects and company information.







