this post was submitted on 17 Nov 2023
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I'm thinking about my next photobash. I've seen photos of projects turning old, likely nonfunctional swimming pools into walipinis, but conventional wisdom has that there's a big difference between an empty concrete swimming pool and a proper foundation. That the sides will collapse without the support of the pool water, or the water table in the ground will lift the thing like a concrete boat and break it. Just the same, it's not uncommon to see abandoned swimming pools laying empty, looking more or less foundation-shaped. It seems like a very solarpunk thing, to turn an expensive-to-maintain luxury into something practical, a greenhouse that takes less energy to keep it warm.

So my question is: can it be done, especially if the pool is already nonfunctional and you're not worried about returning it to its original use? What steps/precautions should you take to make it last and safe? Reinforce the sides? Cut away part of the bottom? Add drainage around it?

Thanks for any thoughts

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[–] perestroika@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

If the soil is dry enough to avoid liquefication, lifting should not happen. A ditch around the pool with drainage to lower ground at some distance would likely solve the problem even if the soil is problematic.

If the concrete is reinforced with rebar, it can withstand sideways load by the soil. If not, the issue of soil pressure would need closer consideration.

Disclaimer: I'm not an engineer