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INSTALLING
THE SWIMMING POOL - part 1
The
swimming pool was purchased in England as a kit from
Christal Pools and delivered to the farmstead. This
particular supplier was chosen primarily because of
ease of installation, and one of the few designs available
which did not require mountains of concrete reinforcement.
As the pool was to be installed by just my wife and
I, then the various components needed to be relatively
easy to handle.
The design of the "double bubble" pool, effectively
two circular pools joined together by a central U frame
at the neck, ensures a self supporting structure, with
no requirement for reinforcing. Additionally, it can
be installed above or below ground or anywhere in between.
In our case the site was sloping, therefore the pool
would be below ground at one side, and slightly above
at the other.
The kit was duly delivered in May of 2000, in fact we
traced its progress from the UK to Paris and then to
Poitiers by virtue of a string of phone calls from concerned
hauliers all asking the same question - "Do you
have a forklift?" The answer was always the same
- "NO", and was greeted with the usual "No
problem". I should have guessed what would happen
- the truck arrived, too large to navigate the turn
at the edge of the hamlet, and the driver asked the
same question!!!
The life of the hamlet came to a grinding halt for two
hours whilst we unpacked the pallet on the lorry and
physically transported all the pieces to the site, whilst
my neighbour's wife taunted the young driver for not
having the skill to get the lorry around the corner!
As mentioned earlier, the site was sloping, and there
was also the problem of the wall and some long established
trees to be removed. In the event, even the excavator
struggled to remove some of the bushes which had become
intertwined with stone under the ground. 
Chris, unfortunately, also brought along his dumper
to remove the spoil. I say unfortunately, because the
damn thing didn't have any brakes! It also had the ability
to select forward AND reverse at the sane time! Stopping
it was a matter of releasing the bucket and praying.
Evidently my prayers were not enough - on my third trip
to the bottom of the garden the bucket failed to release,
the dumper demolished my neighbour's stone wall, then
deposited a small mountain of soil into his garden!
Fortunately we have very understanding neighbours, and
the soil came in useful! One day I guess he'll turn
the wall into a rockery.
The shape of the "double bubble" pool also
makes excavation easier. Being essentially two adjacent
circles, the excavator can be positioned at the centre
point of each "bubble" and most of the spoil
removed in a circle without needing ro move the excavator.
(Remembering, of course, to leave an exit route)
Because the pool excavation only needs to be a matter
of inches larger than the pool structure then it is
important to set up reference points outside of the
work area, so that the accuracy of the excavation can
be checked at regular intervals. We had already decided,
for safety reasons, not to have a divewell. This simplified
the excavation, although this design accommodates a
divewell without needing to change the liner.
The
main excavation took a further day, then followed two
days of hand digging to ensure the site was level and
the correct shape. At this point the U frame was installed
on fast-set mortar pads and lined up. Progress was fairly
rapid from this point on. The base rails were bolted
together, mounted on mortar pads and the levels constantly
checked and rechecked at each stage. Although it is
not vital to get them millimetre perfect, the more
accurate they are, the easier the panels bolt together.
A water level was used for this purpose. If you use
a water level always ensure that the pipe is not partially
in shade (or sun), as this can drastically affect the
accuracy. The panels are machined to a high accuracy
and when bolted together should fit the base rails exactly.
As usual, during the assembly of the panels, the temperature
soared into the mid 30's.
The photograph on the left shows the pool structure
after fitting the panels. The next stage was to screed
the floor. Unlike most pools, the actual screed depth
only needs to be around 4 to 5 centimetres. (I was dubious
about this, however when we removed the liner a couple
of years later the screeding was still in perfect condition.)
Once the screed has set it was finished off with a coat
of weak plaster, brushed on to provide a smooth finish.
Soft sand is notoriously difficult to obtain in this
part of France so we had to make do with river sand,
thus the plaster finish. This was overlaid with a pvc
underlay used for wood floors which we found ideal because
it has self adhesive edges which makes it easy to butt
join, keeps the whole thing in place without distorting,
and is thick enough to protect the liner from any sand
ingress.
Time
to install the liner. Each liner is marked to line up
with the neck point of the pool, ours of course was
marked in the wrong position, which on our first attempt
we didn't discover until the pool was partially full!
Our fault for not blindly following the instructions.
The normal method is to use a powerful vaccuum cleaner
inserted between the liner and the pool panels to pull
the liner into place. Our VAX just wasn't powerful enough
to do this so we decided just to line it up and risk
it. We were 95% successful but once the pool began to
fill, it was evident that the liner was not quite straight.
A year later, when we emptied the pool, we reseated
the liner, this time by ignoring the marking and lining
up relative to the liner seams - result - an absoutely
perfect fit!
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