Pool Building & Backyard Advice
Straight answers on building, renovating, and owning a pool in High Point and the North Carolina Piedmont — design, cost, construction, equipment, and seasonal care, written by builders who work these red-clay yards.
What Actually Drives the Cost of a Custom Pool Build
A custom pool quote is not one number, it is a stack of decisions. Here is what genuinely moves the budget on a High Point pool build, and where homeowners routinely overspend without gaining anything.
Read the guide → Cost & PlanningThe Real Ongoing Cost of Owning a Pool in North Carolina
The build is one number. Owning the pool is a rhythm of recurring costs plus a few big ones that arrive years apart. Here is what actually shows up on the bill in a North Carolina climate.
Read the guide → ConstructionPool Build Timeline: What Happens From Design to First Swim
A custom pool is roughly a dozen distinct trades sequenced in a fixed order, each with its own inspection and its own way of stalling. Here is what happens in each phase and what actually causes delays.
Read the guide → ConstructionPool Permits and Setbacks in High Point and Guilford County
A pool is a permitted structure, not a landscaping project. Here is how the permit and setback process actually works in the High Point area, and the specific things that trip homeowners up.
Read the guide → ConstructionThe Best Time of Year to Start a Pool Build in North Carolina
Most homeowners call a pool builder in April. That is the worst month to start and the best month to already be finishing. Here is why a fall or winter start wins in the Piedmont.
Read the guide → DesignGunite vs. Fiberglass vs. Vinyl Liner: An Honest Comparison
Gunite, fiberglass, and vinyl liner pools are three different structures with different design ceilings, maintenance cycles, and behavior in North Carolina clay. Here is a straight comparison of the tradeoffs.
Read the guide → DesignPool Depth: Why Deep Ends Are Disappearing
Most families barely use the deep end. Here is how depth really gets used, why diving pools demand punishing geometry, and why more shallow lounging water usually beats a deep hole.
Read the guide → DesignTanning Ledges and Sun Shelves: Getting the Details Right
A sun shelf is the most used square footage in a modern pool, but only if the depth, size, umbrella sleeve, and bubbler placement are right. Here is how to spec one properly.
Read the guide → DesignDesigning a Pool for a Small Triad Backyard
A small lot does not rule out a pool. It rules out a bad pool. Plunge pools, geometric shapes, equipment placement, sloped-lot retaining walls, and the access constraint nobody checks first.
Read the guide → ConstructionRed Clay, Slopes, and Rock: What Piedmont Soil Means for Your Pool Dig
Piedmont red clay drains poorly, expands when wet, and is heavy to haul. Here is what that means for excavation, hydrostatic pressure, backfill, rock, sloped lots, and site access.
Read the guide → MaintenanceSaltwater vs. Chlorine Pools: What Actually Changes
Saltwater pools are chlorine pools — a salt cell just makes the chlorine for you. Here is what really changes: the chores, the feel, your coping and metal, and how cold NC winters shut the cell down.
Read the guide → MaintenancePool Water Chemistry Basics: The Five Numbers That Matter
Free vs. combined chlorine, pH, alkalinity, calcium hardness, and CYA — what each one actually does, how they interact, and why a new plaster pool needs a careful start-up.
Read the guide → MaintenanceHow to Prevent and Get Rid of Pool Algae
Green, mustard, and black algae each die differently. Here is why blooms start, the brush-and-shock protocol that actually clears a pool, and why prevention is a runtime and chemistry problem.
Read the guide → EquipmentPool Pumps and Filters Explained
Turnover, head loss, and why pipe size beats horsepower — plus an honest comparison of sand, cartridge, and DE filters, and which one survives Triad pollen season.
Read the guide → EquipmentVariable-Speed Pumps and Pool Energy Costs
The affinity laws mean halving pump speed cuts power draw to roughly an eighth. Here is why running slow and long beats fast and short, how to program a VS pump, and when swapping is worth it.
Read the guide → EquipmentPool Heaters and the North Carolina Swim Season: Gas vs. Heat Pump vs. Solar
A heater is how you turn a three-month pool into a six-month pool in the Piedmont. Here is how gas, heat pumps, and solar actually behave in North Carolina weather, and why your cover matters as much as the heater.
Read the guide → SeasonalWinterizing a Pool in North Carolina: The Definitive Guide
North Carolina winters are real but mild, which means the right winterizing approach here is neither the full Minnesota shutdown nor the Florida do-nothing. Here is what actually protects your pool in the Piedmont.
Read the guide → SeasonalOpening Your Pool in Spring: The Right Order of Operations
Most Triad homeowners open their pool a month too late and spend two weeks fighting an algae bloom they paid for. Here is when to open, the correct sequence, and a realistic first-week checklist.
Read the guide → EquipmentPool Covers Compared: Solar, Safety, Automatic, and Winter
Solar covers, safety covers, automatic covers, and winter covers all get called pool covers, and they do four different jobs. Here is what each one is actually for and which ones must be planned during the build.
Read the guide → EquipmentPool Automation Systems: What a Controller Actually Does
Pool automation is not a luxury gadget. It runs your pump, valves, heater, lights, and features on a schedule, and in North Carolina its freeze protection alone can save your equipment pad.
Read the guide → MaintenancePool Resurfacing and Replastering: Warning Signs, Causes, and the Process
A pool interior is a wear surface, and it tells you when it is failing. Here are the warning signs, what actually causes early failure, and what a proper resurface involves.
Read the guide → DesignPool Tile and Interior Finishes: How to Get the Water Color You Actually Want
Plaster, quartz, and pebble feel different underfoot, wear differently, and completely change the color of your water. Here is how to choose an interior finish and waterline tile that work together.
Read the guide → DesignPool Decking Materials Compared: Heat, Grip, and Freeze-Thaw in the Piedmont
Concrete, stamped concrete, exposed aggregate, travertine, pavers, natural stone, and cool-deck coatings. How each performs on heat underfoot, wet grip, freeze-thaw, and repairs.
Read the guide → DesignPool Lighting Design: How to Light Water Instead of Blinding People
Good pool lighting makes the water glow. Bad pool lighting shines straight into your face. Here is how fixture choice, count, and aim decide which one you get.
Read the guide → DesignWater Features: Waterfalls, Deck Jets, and Bubblers, and What Each One Sounds Like
Sheer descents, rock waterfalls, scuppers, deck jets, bubblers, and spillover spas. What each one sounds like, what it costs you in plumbing and pumps, and the tradeoffs nobody mentions.
Read the guide → SafetyPool Safety in North Carolina: Barriers, Gates, Covers, and Drain Compliance
The barrier is usually what stands between you and a passed final inspection, and it decides your deck layout. Here is how fences, gates, alarms, covers, and VGB drain compliance fit together.
Read the guide → DesignLandscaping Around a Pool in the Piedmont: What to Plant, What to Avoid
The plants you choose around a pool decide how much time you spend skimming it. What thrives in North Carolina clay, what wrecks decking, and how grading keeps runoff out of your water.
Read the guide → DesignOutdoor Kitchens and Fire Pits Poolside: How to Zone the Yard
A pool is the anchor, not the room. How to zone wet, lounge, and cook areas, why the grill belongs near the house, and the utility runs that must go in before the deck is poured.
Read the guide → DesignHot Tubs and Spas: What North Carolina Homeowners Should Know
A portable hot tub and an in-ground spillover spa solve the same craving in completely different ways. Pads, 240V wiring, shared heaters, jets, and what actually makes winter use work.
Read the guide → Cost & PlanningHow to Vet a Pool Builder: Licensing, Contracts, Draws, and Red Flags
Once the plaster is on, you cannot see the steel or the plumbing. Here is how to verify licensing yourself, read a real proposal, structure the draws, and spot the builders to walk away from.
Read the guide → DesignComposite Decking vs Wood for a Pool Deck: The Honest Tradeoffs
A raised deck around a pool is a different animal than a slab. Wood, capped composite, and hardscape all behave differently at poolside. Here is what each costs you in heat, upkeep, and grip.
Read the guide → DesignPaver Patios Around Pools: Why the Base Matters More Than the Stone
Concrete pavers, poured concrete, and travertine each make a very different pool patio. In Piedmont red clay, the difference between a great paver deck and a heaving one is almost entirely what is underneath.
Read the guide → DesignPergolas and Shade Structures Poolside: Beating the Piedmont Sun
A Piedmont summer afternoon is brutal on an unshaded pool deck. Here is an honest look at pergolas, louvered roofs, cabanas, shade sails, and umbrellas, and how to anchor and place them right.
Read the guide → ConstructionRetaining Walls for Sloped Piedmont Yards: Making Room for a Pool
So many Triad backyards slope that the first job is building flat ground to put a pool on. Here is how a retaining wall creates a level pad and the engineering that keeps it standing.
Read the guide → DesignScreened Pool Enclosures in NC: The Honest Take for the Triad
Screen cages are everywhere in Florida and rare here, and that difference is not an accident. Here is what a pool enclosure buys a homeowner, what it costs, and when a simpler option wins.
Read the guide → DesignPool Houses, Cabanas, and Changing Rooms: What They're Worth
From a simple covered cabana to a full pool house with a bath and kitchenette, a poolside structure keeps wet feet out of your house and makes the yard genuinely livable. Here is how to weigh it.
Read the guide → DesignInfinity and Vanishing-Edge Pools: How They Work and What They Take
A vanishing edge that spills toward a view is the most dramatic move in pool design, and one of the least forgiving to build. Here is how the edge actually works and what it demands.
Read the guide → DesignPlunge Pools and Cold Plunge: Small, Deep, and Surprisingly Versatile
A plunge pool is a small, deeper pool built to cool off, relax, and recover in rather than swim laps. Here is how it fits a tight Triad lot, and how heating and chilling change what it does.
Read the guide → DesignLap Pools for Fitness: Building a Pool You Actually Swim In
A lap pool is built around swimming exercise, not lounging. Here is the length that makes laps work, the swim-in-place alternative when your lot is short, and how depth, heat, and shape follow the purpose.
Read the guide → DesignSpools: The Small Pool and Spa Combo for Tight Triad Yards
A spool is a compact pool that doubles as an oversized spa, often heated year-round with jets. Here is why it fits small and sloped Triad yards, and how it compares to a hot tub or a plunge pool.
Read the guide → DesignGeometric vs. Freeform Pool Shapes: How to Choose
Rectangle or lagoon? Clean lines or organic curves? Your pool's shape is the first big design decision, and it should be driven by your home, your lot, and how you'll actually use the water.
Read the guide → MaintenanceSigns Your Pool Needs Renovation (Not Just Another Repair)
There is a difference between a pool that needs a repair and a pool that needs a renovation. Here is how to read the signs, tell cosmetic from structural, and plan the work right.
Read the guide → DesignPool Coping Options Explained: The Edge That Does More Than You Think
Coping is the cap around the pool edge where the deck meets the water. It finishes the shell, sheds water away, gives you a handhold, and sets the look. Here are the materials and how they hold up to NC freeze-thaw.
Read the guide → MaintenancePool Leak Detection and Repair: Finding the Water Before It Finds Your Deck
Is your pool leaking or just evaporating in the summer heat? Here is the bucket test that settles it, where leaks actually hide, and why chasing one down fast matters more than most owners realize.
Read the guide → MaintenanceBlack Algae vs Green Algae: How to Tell Them Apart and Kill Each One
Not all pool algae is the same. Green, yellow, and black algae look different, resist chlorine differently, and take very different work to kill. Here is how to identify and treat each.
Read the guide → Cost & PlanningDoes a Pool Add Home Value in North Carolina? An Honest Answer
The honest answer is: it depends on your neighborhood, your buyer, and the quality of the build. A pool can support resale in the right Triad market, but treat it first as a lifestyle investment.
Read the guide → Cost & PlanningFinancing a Pool Build: How Triad Homeowners Commonly Pay for It
Most homeowners do not write a single check for a pool. Here are the common ways NC families finance a build, the general trade-offs of each, and why you should get real numbers from lenders before you commit.
Read the guide → SeasonalHow Long Is Swim Season in the Triad? And How to Stretch It
An unheated pool in the Piedmont is comfortable roughly late May through September. Here is what that season really looks like, and the honest ways to add weeks on each end.
Read the guide → Cost & PlanningHOA and Pool Approvals in NC: Navigating the Architectural Review
If you live under an HOA, its architectural review committee is a hurdle that runs alongside your county permit. Here is what the committee typically checks, what you submit, and how to get approved without delays.
Read the guide → SeasonalHeavy Rain and Storm Pool Care in North Carolina
Piedmont summers bring hard thunderstorms and the occasional tropical remnant. Here is how to prep your pool before a storm and get the water back to clear afterward without draining a drop.
Read the guide →Ready to design your backyard oasis?
Oasis Pools builds custom pools and outdoor living spaces across High Point, Greensboro, Winston-Salem and the Triad. Tell us about your yard and we'll put together a free, no-pressure consultation.