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View Full Version : Opinions on this Gunite Pool Quote?



clayinatl
07-11-2006, 11:09 AM
16X34 Freeform Gunite (Oasis type design) - 31,760
Flagstone Coping - INCL
Pool steps with Extended Bench - INCL
500 Watt / 100 for spa - INCL
Spa raised 18" for waterfall with stacked stone, 8 jets, blower and jet booster - $8500
Raypac 405k heater - $2200
Gas / Electrical - incl
Retaining Wall (modular brick) - 4800
Jandy Salt System - 1600
Dirt Removal & Grading - 900
1000 Sq. ft dyed concrete pool deck - 7000
Polaris 280 - incl
Frost proof waterline tile - incl
PebbleTec - 2700
Permits - incl
pool startup - incl
----------------------------
Base Total - $59,640

Options:
Flagstone Laterals - (he said at cost) - $12 per linear foot (about 40 ft needed)
Aqualink remote control - $3450

Pump - Jandy 1 HP Stealth, spa pump 2 HP Stealth
Filter - Jandy 460 sq ft cartridtge

mmcguire
07-11-2006, 01:07 PM
seems okay to me. We were quoted $65K -$70K for a like pool. We did not have a raised spa. We had a seperate waterfall and 28' notched beam with rock. We had about 300 more sqft of decking. We also are in expansive soil so there were addidtional costs there.

Ready2swim
07-11-2006, 02:33 PM
Sounds a little high to me...I live in the Houston area and we are currently building a pool with the same dimensions but a little less decking for $45K. We added the Aqualink and other things...I know that this area is cheaper than most though.

GutierrezPlastering
07-11-2006, 02:56 PM
My opinion is the quote represents the quality of work you are going to get. A quote that is too low will only be a pool that will take forever to build and have problems as aposed to a quote that is high. It will be worked on at a consistent time. So its basically all about how much you are willing to pay, and if the company has a good reputation.

Ready2swim
07-11-2006, 03:17 PM
I agree that cheap isnt always better...that is one of the reasons that made me choose the company with the highest price for my area. Dont get me wrong I didnt just want to spend more money but they were the ones that had the best reputation and seemed to know what they were talking about.

pcgeek
07-11-2006, 03:25 PM
Where are you building? We're building a slightly larger (20x40) gunite in the DC area and all of our quotes come back somewhat higher (pools are rediculously expensive in this area). The retaining wall cost is going to depend on the size of the wall. The cheapest we saw for a brushed concrete (not even stained) pool deck was $7.60 per sf and all of the PebbleTec prices we saw were a LOT more than that (ours is costing something like 8900 for the Tahoe Blue). I almost want to move to Florida, Arizona or Texas just to get the chear pool construction.

clayinatl
07-11-2006, 03:59 PM
Where are you building?

Sorry, Atlanta area.

I've gotten 2 quotes so far, and both of these are from 2 of the better builders in the area (no complaints on BBB, friend recommendations, etc.).

We have the 2 big National companies coming out in the next 2 days - Anthony and Sylvan & Blue Haven - we'll see how they are.

pcgeek
07-11-2006, 05:11 PM
FWIW we talked to both Anthony & Sylvan and Blue Haven as well (didn't go with either, we ended up going with a large local firm).

Anthony and Sylvan was a little more expensive and was probably a fallback but we weren't thrilled that the sales guy had only been with the company for a few months and completely missed the fact that we'd have to build a retaining wall (which affected both the price and layout). They did give him good training and he had the highest tech tools out of everyone who came. They were clean in my area for BBB and other than general building hassles the people I know who used them locally to DC were happy. They were the only other company besides the one we went with that offered an in-floor cleaning system.

Blue Haven was downright scary. They did come in the cheapest but thhe sales guy who came out had also been working with them only for a couple of months, also missed the retaining wall and his only training was the fact that he owned a pool. They are usually a franchise shop so make sure you find out the specifics on your local franchise (ours was horrible with the BBB).

The builder we finally ended up going with was somewhat old fashioned (used an architectural scale and pencil for all of his drawings) but he was the construction manager previously for the same company and had been there for 20 years. He was the only one to shoot elevations of the yard and figure out that we had to drop 5' from the patio to the pool deck in a pretty short distance. They also had the in floor cleaning syetem and were willing to do everything else we wanted (though he still gives me major grief about my insistance they put in a pool pilot total control instead of the mineral springs system they try to push) - at least he's willing to do it even though he's way over charging me for it. They were clean on the BBB and were the largest builder in the area behind the nationals (they also did the commercial pools in my current and past neighborhood).

Just make sure when you're comparing prices you try to do an apples to apples on the individual items (flooring sf price, PebbleTec price, etc) since the quotes usually have very different things in them. I swear this is worse than the construction process when we bought our house - and I thought I was done with the hassles ;-)

eljefe281
07-11-2006, 05:23 PM
...his only training was the fact that he owned a pool.

What else do you need? :D

pcgeek
07-11-2006, 06:47 PM
Guess I should mention that he owned a "basic" pool and had no idea what a SWG was and was confused on the whole PebbleTec thing. He also didn't get why we wanted a pool heater and it's not like we're in the tropics up here (except for right now when I'm wishing we already had the pool). I know most people say not to pick a builder based on the salesperson but I think that needs to be taken into account only when comparing competent sales people since they are the ones that work with you on the design and contract (and any options you might be getting).

y0manda
07-12-2006, 07:32 PM
I did a pool similar though my spa was raised 48" My pool project was about $40K. DIY.

wbrady
07-13-2006, 08:22 AM
Your price seems very reasonable to me. I getting a 20'x40' gunite without a spa and no pebble tech, but with everything else you stated and my cost is $52k. I am also in the DC area and am going with a Mid size local pool builder. I interviewed 6 PB's and one of them was Anthony & Sylvan. Take a close look at there quote, ours only had 1 skimmer and 2 returns, thats how they can save a $$ on plumbing. The company we went with has 2 skimmers and 3 returns and a 4th return dedicated to the polarias all standard.