Pool landscaping ideas – the best materials, plants and lighting to use
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4. Include a putting green
Your pool landscaping ideas can offer more than just beauty and a bit of shade. Add recreation to the list by installing a putting green adjacent to your pool patio, like interior designer Breegan Jane did at her client's Southern California home, where the goal of the outdoor space was to 'surprise and delight.'
Breegan Jane - 2/14
1. Plant on an island
Your pool landscaping ideas don't have to be relegated to the sides of the pool. For an original idea that evokes a tropical resort, bring the vegetation into the pool by stationing it on an island structure right in the middle of water, like at this Florida home by Brittany Farinas of House of One Interiors. Want to go full paradise vibes? Use palms.
Brittany Farinas, House of One / Lifestyle Production Group - 3/14
2. Use lighting to enhance the landscape
Lighting is the perfect complement to pool landscaping. It can emphasize certain features (try uplighting shrubs and trees) and enhance the overall ambience of a newly landscaped space.
String lights are a pool lighting that's more about form than function, but the ambience a set of bistro lights will add to your pool area is second to none.
If you're lucky enough to have a pool house, use it as an anchor point for your string lights, and stretch them above the length of the pool, like The Fox Group did, above. No pool house? Try filling the bottom of whisky barrel planters with cement, then inserting a wooden post to create a semi-permanent anchor point for lights. Don't forget to finish off the planters with soil and your favorite annuals.
Designer: The Fox Group Photographer: Lindsay Salazar - 4/14
3. Use planters to add personal style
Both your planters and the plants you put in them are a chance to add your personal style to your pool patio.
'We like to include banana leaf trees and orchids to add a touch of nature, and high-design planters can be a creative way to show off one’s own personal style,' says Lance Thomas of Louisiana-based Thomas Guy Interiors. Above, Thomas chose organic planters and unstructured ferns to complement the contemporary, minimalist pool design.
Thomas Guy Interiors / Haylei Smith - 5/14
5. Use landscaping for privacy
Looking for a pool fence idea that adds privacy and beauty? Your landscaping can do the job if you plant high trees or bushy shrubs around the perimeter of your pool or property, a la this Florida property.
Another idea we love from this photo? The cabana. When you're brainstorming your landscaping and pool area, don't forget to include a shady spot to retreat to when you're tired of sunbathing.
Brittany Farinas, House of One Interiors / Lifestyle Production Group - 6/14
6. Invest in LED lighting around a pool
When considering pool landscaping, smart pool lighting certainly have their part to play. A well-planned lighting scheme can do wonders for your backyard pool and shouldn't be an afterthought.
'For small cascades and fountains, direct underwater spotlights onto the plinth of flowing water, or run a color-changing LED strip along the rill from which the water emerges,' suggests Sally Storey, lighting director at John Cullen.
An impressive backyard pool is hugely enhanced when illuminated at night. Underwater lights can be halogen, LED or fiber optic, but they must be encased in waterproof, IP-rated fixtures.
Alternatively, solar garden lighting, such as bulbs hidden in between evergreens or in containers create a soft glow.
Future / Mark Bolton - 7/14
7. Pick the perfect pool deck landscaping
Poolside deck provide versatile and cost-effective ways to extend your living area into the outdoors. What's more, decking creates the perfect focal point for a low-maintenance yard, and is cheaper and easier to use than paving.
At its best, a sturdy, water-resistant timber deck is a handsome, hard-wearing pool area that complements most backyard pool settings.
But decks don’t only look good: other advantages include being relatively lightweight in comparison to stone, quick and easy to install and forgiving. Plus, timber can be cut to size to fit perfectly round awkward corners – perfect if you don't have a rectangular pool.
Future / Mark Bolton Photography - 8/14
8. Add shade and privacy with ivy
In an ideal world our pool areas would be private sanctuaries where we could swim, entertain and relax away from prying eyes.
Yet, for many pool owners, the reality is quite different. Spending time outdoors can be like living in a goldfish bowl because there is nothing to screen their backyard pool from neighboring windows.
Smart garden shade ideas are great if you want to shield your pool area from the neighborhood and create shady coverage at the same time. A good place to start is with your pool fence or property boundary.
If you have an existing fence or trellis, plant ivy near the base to create a living privacy wall. No fence? Plant a deciduous hedge, or trail ivy up a wall using a trellis.
Future / Armelle Habib - 9/14
9. Landscape with rocks, trees and overgrown grasses
If you are not one for a traditional pool area, then consider a more natural landscape for your outdoor swim.
Today’s natural pools – or swimming ponds as they are often known – are welcomed into the border garden, whether in a formal setting of lawns, surrounded by flowers and grasses, or even made to look like a natural garden pond.
For a rugged appearance, take inspiration from creative rock gardens and lay down plenty of misshapen rocks, pebbles and limestone. The main highlight of a rock garden is the quiet, zen-like aesthetic they add to your backyard.
Future / © Roy Westwood - 10/14
10. Highlight a rectangular pool with flower beds and borders
Whether you like raised garden beds or you prefer planting straight into the ground, flower beds can make exceptional dividers for a garden path around a backyard pool.
This is especially the case when you bring tall, architectural plants into the mix. This smart garden path is a beautiful way to establish the boundary of a walkway and to zone off your pool area from the rest of the garden.
What's more, it will continue to offer color and structure throughout the seasons, even when the pool is not in use.
Future / Alistair Nicholls - 11/14
11. Set up a seating area around the pool
When considering pool patio and other hard landscaping materials for a pool, your first priority will be to establish the functional spaces, from terraces and patios, to paths and borders around the swimming pool.
The expanse of an area and its use will dictate which materials are most suitable.
For instance, a hard standing for a table and chairs needs to be flat and stable, and you might want to keep granular aggregates, such as gravel or bark, away from the pool so they are not carried into the water.
Future / Mark Bolton - 12/14
12. Install a non-slip surface
While a pebble-dashed floor isn't entirely non-slip, it is certainly a less slippery option in comparison to stone slabs, pavers and decking.
Opt for an entirely smooth surface to avoid any nasty cuts on the feet and if your pool is indoors, be sure to include a professional drainage system.
Proper drainage will ensure that the water in your in-ground pool remains clean and protects your surrounding yard, deck, patio, landscaping, and home from possible water damage, erosion, and debris.
Plus, no one wants to be constantly mopping up water.
Future / Polly Eltes - 13/14
13. Use concrete as a modern alternative to stone slabs
Lusting after a modern industrial landscape? Durable, easy to clean and heat-retaining, there’s a lot to love about concrete flooring in a modern backyard.
Perfect for nailing the urban trend, it works best in contemporary spaces, but can also be mixed with plenty of greenery and colored foliage for a striking contrast.
While the use of concrete has become commonplace, it was once seen as an inferior material in comparison to stone. But if we can forget about it as a cheap substitute we discover that it has its own intrinsic qualities, as interesting as natural materials and very much more versatile.
Concrete is quite simply a blend of aggregates – sand and gravel or crushed stone – bonded together in a dense, stone-like mass by hardened cement.
This material has made possible incredible structures and surfaces. It is the cement that gives concrete its dull-gray appearance, and so the secret with in-situ garden paving is to remove the cement from the surface before it sets.
Future / Matthew Williams - 14/14
14. Mix materials around a pool
Large patio pavers have been gaining popularity in California over the years, and it is easy to see why.
If you're wondering how to make your garden feel more modern without embarking on an overly expensive redesign, then you should seriously consider employing oversized patio pavers for the landscaping around your pool.
As far as backyard landscaping go, large pavers are the opposite of discreet and that's exactly why we're seeing more of them in outdoor paving designs.
Bold and immediately noticeable, oversized paving slabs create an instant indoor-outdoor effect, because they emit the luxury look of indoor tiles – just outdoors.
Belgard