The Morning Call (Sunday)

Popularity of PLUNGE POOLS

These smaller, shallower water features are less expensive to build and maintain

- By Lia Picard

When Amy Holland bought her house in Austin, Texas, in 2020, she and her husband knew they wanted to have a pool in their backyard — but not just any pool.

“We don’t have kids, so we didn’t want some giant water slide, all the features,” said Holland, 46, who works in technology sales. “We really wanted just a ‘cocktail pool’ that we could dip in, have some drinks, have some friends over. We just didn’t want a big pool.”

The solution was a plunge pool. While traditiona­l backyard pools are typically 15 feet wide and 30 feet long, plunge pools tend to be no larger than 10 by 20 feet. They are also flat-bottomed and shallow, usually around 5 feet deep.

They are also less expensive to maintain and easier to build. The design Holland and her husband chose allowed for a pool that fit snugly into their sloped backyard and did not interfere with the lengthy root system of the 100-year-old live oak on the property.

Other homeowners like the minimalism of plunge pools, said Allison Messner, chief executive of the landscape design company Yardzen in Sausalito, California.

“I think people that are drawn to plunge pools are looking for a smaller footprint pool because maybe they have more functional areas in their yard, which is also a modern look,” Messner said. Larger swimming pools don’t allow for much else in the typical backyard, she added, while plunge pools leave space for dining and play areas.

They can also “make your yard look and feel like a staycation spot,” Messner said.

Plunge pools are not new. In nature, they take the form of deep basins at the bottoms of waterfalls, where erosion creates a natural swimming hole. The ancient Romans installed small circular pools, usually 5 feet deep, as part of their baths. Tiny pools inspired by the Romans’ example dotted British gardens in the 18th century. In the social media age, photos of plunge pools at tropical resorts or Grecian villas are often widely shared.

Once reserved for the wealthy in the United States, backyard pools boomed when gunite pools, a type of concrete pool, became more affordable for many homeowners. For a time, the kidney-shaped pool — often 8 feet deep at the deep end, with requisite diving board — became a suburban status symbol, especially in Southern California, where neighborho­ods were filled with the sounds of splash fights and games of Marco Polo.

Lucas Firmin, a pool builder in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, said that most pools he builds these days are about 5 feet deep.

Chapman Bullock, co-founder of Proper Plunge Pools in Austin, Texas, said that even before the new popularity of plunge pools, people were using traditiona­l pools in a different way.

“When you sometimes go to a pool party, you’ll see everybody crowded in the shallow end standing together, and there’s a big area of the pool that’s not being used,” he said. “Just having a body of water to cool off in and relax is really what most people are looking for.”

The standard backyard pool isn’t going away, but a host of companies have cropped up in recent years making prefabrica­ted plunge pools easily accessible to a growing number of people. These companies also fill a gap created by labor and supply shortages facing traditiona­l builders and help to cut back on costs and timing.

“I think the pandemic definitely drove demand for plunge pools for that very reason,” said Karen Larson, a co-founder of Soake Pools in Pembroke, New Hampshire. “Maybe even some people that might have been thinking of a large pool may have converted to the idea of a small pool.”

Larson said Soake has had increased demand for its “precast plunge pools” in recent years. After the homeowner chooses the size and finishings (such as tile and bench options), Soake builds the pool off-site as a local landscape contractor prepares space in the yard. When the pool’s body is complete, it is transporte­d to the home and placed on-site by a crane. The process takes anywhere from “a few days to a few weeks,” Larson said.

Other prefabrica­ted plunge pool companies are Plunge Plus in Easton, Massachuse­tts, and Modpools in British Columbia. Modpools uses recycled shipping containers for its pools, which are available for delivery in the United States.

According to a nationwide survey of 1,100 real estate agents conducted by Homelight, a real estate referral company, a midtier or upscale pool cost about $70,000 to $100,000 in the third quarter of 2020.

Proper Plunge Pools charges around $40,000 to $60,000 for its smaller models.

“What we’re seeing in Austin is, a lot of pool companies won’t even start talking to you unless you’re willing to spend $70,000 to $80,000, and then really at the end of it, you’re going to be spending close to $100,000,” Bullock said. “It’s a lot of money. At the end of the day, you’re getting something that’s just as high quality, and I think aesthetica­lly looks just as good, as a custom-built pool.”

Once plunge pools are built, maintainin­g them is also less expensive: They require less chemicals and water, and heating them uses less energy.

“It’s more financiall­y efficient for the homeowner, because the heating bill is significan­tly less,” said Philip Michael, owner of Cool Water Pool Works in Southampto­n, New York.

Smaller pools are easy to cool down and heat up, which makes them attractive to people who would otherwise close their pools in the colder months.

Leigh Profit, 42, installed a Soake plunge pool in the backyard of her Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, farmhouse that she has turned into an Airbnb.

“It’s extremely relaxing,” she said. “It can be heated up to as warm as you want — hot tub temperatur­es. So it feels really therapeuti­c, too, when you’re just in this calm water and plunged in there.”

 ?? KATHERINE SQUIER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Plunge pools have become an alternativ­e for homeowners who want a simple, less expensive way to cool off.
KATHERINE SQUIER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Plunge pools have become an alternativ­e for homeowners who want a simple, less expensive way to cool off.

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