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infinity edge pool design
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Infinity Edge Pool Design

Infinity pools are almost always in precarious locations, such as cliffs or mountain tops, so they must be anchored securely. This needs sound structural engineering, based on the geological conditions found at the site. Such pools are often substantially more expensive to build than a normal swimming pool, mainly due to the cost of the foundations at these ambitious locations.
In reality, the edge of the pool ends in a weir that is one-half to one inch (12 mm to 25 mm) lower than the required median pool water level. There is a trough or catch basin below the weir. The water spills into the catch basin, from which it is then pumped back into the pool. One type of location in which the effect is particularly impressive is where the infinity edge appears to merge with a larger body of water such as the ocean, with the sky (if the pool is on the side of a hill or field of green), or with foliage.
Properly built, these pools have two circulation systems. The first functions like that of a regular pool, filtering and heating the water in the main pool. The second circulation system (known as the "edge system" or "effects system"), filters the water in the catch basin and returns it to the upper pool. When the edge-system stops, the water level in the upper pool continues to spill into the basin - stopping at the level of the weir wall. The water necessary to raise the upper pool and fill the edge-system plumbing is called the "water in transit." Considerable skill is required on the part of the designer to incorporate a catch basin of an appropriate size.

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Album name:Architecture & Design
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Keywords:#infinity #edge #pool #design
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Date added:Jan 20, 2012
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