Rectangular inox pool in a rural garden
A rectangular inox pool draws a sharp line through the garden. The water sits inside a clean metal shell, while light timber decking softens the edge and gives the surrounding terrace a quieter tone. From the first view, the project is about contrast: the cool sheen of inox, the pale boards around it, and the green lawn that frames the whole composition.
At night, the pool edge lighting becomes part of the design rather than a separate layer. It follows the long sides with a steady line, tracing the rectangle and underlining the waterline. That narrow band of light gives the pool a clear outline, especially where the reflective surface catches the darker garden around it. The effect is restrained, but it changes how the pool reads in the landscape.
Clean geometry set into the garden
The rectangular in-ground pool is kept deliberately simple in shape. Straight edges, tight corners and a low profile let the material do most of the work. Inox reflects the sky and nearby planting, so the basin never sits flat in the scene. It shifts with the light, showing faint highlights on the wall and a deeper blue across the water. That interaction gives the pool a more layered presence than a standard plastered basin.
What surrounds it matters just as much. The wood terrace around the pool creates a clear border and brings a lighter surface underfoot. The planks run in regular lines, echoing the geometry of the pool and guiding the eye toward the water. Their pale tone keeps the setting open, even where the pool is tucked close to the house and the planted edges.
Material contrast between inox and timber
The pool wall detail is visible in several close views, and those images tell much of the story. A stainless-steel opening, round fittings and the crisp edge of the basin show how precise the finish is around the waterline. Instead of hiding the construction, the design lets these elements sit in plain view. The result is a pool that reads as an architectural object as much as a place to swim.
Against that metal surface, the timber terrace has a different rhythm. The boards carry a natural grain and a lighter colour that tempers the reflective steel. Their straight joints reinforce the plan of the project, while the material itself keeps the edge from feeling hard. It is a simple move, but an important one: the terrace frames the pool without competing with it.
Light used as a line, not an accent
The pool edge lighting is integrated into the rim, where it draws a thin, continuous line along the water. Because the light runs level with the basin, it does not break the shape. It follows it. That makes the rectangular form readable from across the garden and gives the pool a second contour when the sky darkens. The water then picks up the glow and adds its own reflections to the line.
In the close-ups, the light appears almost like a seam between materials. Inox, water and wood meet at that boundary, each surface taking light differently. The steel reflects sharply, the water scatters it, and the timber absorbs most of it. This variation keeps the composition from becoming static. Even without movement, the surfaces change from one viewpoint to the next.
Terrace, planting and the wider setting
The modern pool landscaping remains understated and open. A stretch of lawn and planted borders keep the pool from feeling isolated, while the terrace extends the usable space around it. From wider angles, the house comes into view as well: a white volume with a pitched roof, red-orange tiles and wooden accents. The pool sits nearby, but not against the architecture. It holds its own place in the garden while still relating to the house.
That wider scene makes the project feel grounded in its setting. Hedges and trees close the view, and the pale decking helps connect the basin to the surrounding greenery. The straight lines of the terrace, the low pool edge and the planted boundary all work in one direction: they keep the garden legible. Nothing here is overdrawn. The arrangement depends on clear edges and a limited palette of materials.
Reflections across the water surface
Water gives the project a second layer. In the brighter images, the surface turns into a mirror for the sky and nearby planting. In the darker views, it reads as a dense blue plane that deepens the rectangle. Those shifts are subtle, but they help the inox pool feel active even when the garden is still. Reflections gather along the long edge, then break apart near the fittings and wall details.
The close views of the basin underline how precise the pool wall detail is. The stainless-steel surface shows openings, round components and the junctions where the wall meets the edge. These are not decorative gestures; they are the points where the pool’s form becomes visible. Because the detailing is so direct, the eye reads the basin as a crafted volume, not just a filled hole in the terrace.
A measured composition of water, wood and greenery
The most persuasive aspect of the project is its restraint. The rectangular in-ground pool is not surrounded by excessive planting or heavy construction. Instead, water, wood and greenery stay in clear relation to each other. The pale terrace outlines the basin, the inox surface catches the light, and the garden softens the perimeter. That simplicity makes the composition easy to read from every angle shown in the images.
Seen together, the pool, terrace and planting form a compact outdoor room without enclosing it. The straight pool edge, the timber decking and the low planting bands keep the view open to the house and the garden beyond. It is a pool project built from lines, surfaces and reflections. Those elements do the work, and they remain visible throughout the page.
The final impression is one of precision rather than display. The inox pool holds a strong rectangular shape, the wood terrace around pool details the boundary, and the pool edge lighting gives the basin a distinct outline after dark. With the lawn and planting around it, the whole setting feels carefully drawn in space, but never overworked.
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