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| The Big Splash |
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Say goodbye to the standard kidney shape. Today’s pools are packed with artistic touches that make them as individual as the people for whom they’re designed. We cast our eye on four outstanding examples.
LAP OF LUXURY The homeowner is a serious swimmer, so a lap pool was definitely in order. But not just any straight-arrow lap pool. This one is 70 feet long, with hourglass curves that echo the rounded arcs of the home. A beach entry at the eastern edge allows easy access; a grotto area covered by an oculus opening surrounded by tropical plants offers shade from the sun, and a negative edge at the western terminus gives the illusion of being able to swim off toward Mexico. The pool is spanned by a romantic arched bridge leading from the main house to the 1,500-square-foot guest cabana. “It’s a big space but it’s very oriented to a human scale,” says Scholz, who labored with his design team for four years on the design and construction of the home and pool. “You could put 50 people on the pool deck or three people, and it still feels right.” After three years of daily dips, the homeowner earlier this year challenged the design team to solve two issues: winter breezes off the Gulf and solar overheating in the summer. Scholz and Walker devised a clever enclosure made of sliding glass doors for the western, windier half of the pool. The owner can control the elements with a quick opening or closing of the new glass doors. Best of all, the enclosure looks like it was part of the original design.
A POOL WITH A VIEW The Cogans replaced the big lap pool with a considerably smaller 360-degree raised pool with a vanishing edge and moved it to the westernmost part of the property, right on the harbor. Iridescent glass tiles in seven different shades of blue line the entire pool interior; a Medusa head made of handmade tiles decorates the sun deck floor. Around the outside of the pool are copper and clear blue glass tiles in a basket weave pattern that glimmer in the late afternoon sun. Instead of concrete, a long swath of grass, flanked with Italian cypress trees and Medjool palms, separates the pool from a gazebo at the eastern end. A self-described perfectionist, Cogan designed the entire redo. He’s had plenty of experience; his Orlando-based Cogan Development Company builds four- and five-star resort hotels around the world.
BIG DIPPER The couple drew design inspiration from their travels to Spain and Morocco—“something spicy,” says the wife. Floors built of multicolored, distressed Italian ceramic tiles (“We picked every color in the showroom,” she says) and a riot of tropical plants—white birds of paradise, raphis palms, crotons, philodendrons of all types—surround the black sunstone saltwater pool. The guest cabana wall that abuts it was painted a bright Moroccan gold. Best of all, every room in the house commands pool and courtyard views. “When the weather’s nice,” she says, “we open all the doors and experience the sounds and smells.” With four sitting ledges, waterspouts and a spa with waterfall wall that’s clad in the same multicolored tiles, the pool is a hedonistic retreat, but the owners admit they don’t actually swim in it. “We’re dippers; we dip after doing our gardening,” she says. “The pool was built for beauty and for atmosphere. It’s a bonus if you get in it.”
PARTY CENTRAL Flanked by magnificent sabal palms—uplit at night for maximum effect—and surrounded by more than 5,000 square feet of outdoor terraces, the pool overlooks one of the lakes for which this exclusive Lakewood Ranch community is named. A dozen people can easily fit into the hot tub, and a nook, ledge and waterfall provide ample privacy. A rock pathway behind the pool provides a beautiful view of the house. The price tag for such liquid luxury: $250,000, according to vice president of sales and marketing Rita Ferrell. |
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