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A cracked concrete deck, an outdated pool, and a dilapidated fence can quietly drain a property’s value and the owner’s motivation to spend time outside. The before-and-after renovations collected here show exactly what changes when homeowners decide the backyard pool should match the ambition of the rest of the house. Tile work gets replaced. Decking shifts from poured concrete to travertine or large-format porcelain. Water features, lighting systems, and clean geometric lines take over where tired curves once sat. These 37 projects share a common thread: the homeowners were not satisfied with functional alone. They wanted a backyard that signals taste, investment, and a clear point of view. The results range from resort-style pools with vanishing edges to compact urban spaces rebuilt with sharp modern lines. Each renovation carries practical lessons about what actually changes the look, feel, and perceived value of an outdoor space at the highest level.
In order to come up with the very specific design ideas, we create most designs with the assistance of state-of-the-art AI interior design software.
Desert Modernism Replaces a Tired Pergola and Concrete Pool Deck

Terracotta floor tiles now cover every inch of the pool surround, replacing beige concrete, while white molded lounge chairs and a marble-topped dining table signal a shift toward mid-century resort style. The poolhouse was rebuilt with flat white stucco, sliding glass doors, and Spanish tile accents in rust and cream. Columnar cacti, barrel cacti, and agave plants fill the gravel beds where grass once grew.
Waterfall Wall and Teal Mosaic Tiles Replace Weathered Wood Pergola

Illuminated at dusk, the redesigned space centers on a rectangular pool lined with teal mosaic tile and a sheet waterfall cascading from a stone-clad wall. A suspended chandelier of green glass bottles hangs over the walnut dining table below. Torch-style fire columns anchor the upper terrace flanking the waterfall, while a linear gas fire feature runs along the right pool edge beside charcoal-cushioned chaise lounges.
Raised Spa Wall and Limestone Decking Pull a Dated Pool Into Modern Territory
Where a metal pergola with canvas panels once shaded a teak dining set, a concrete-and-wood louvered overhang now extends over a long marble-topped outdoor kitchen with pendant lights in aged brass. The pool itself was rebuilt with deep navy mosaic tile and a raised white plaster wall that doubles as a sheet-water spillway into a lower basin. Clipped boxwood spheres in oversized clay pots anchor the near corners of the limestone deck.
In The Details: The raised spillway wall is finished in smooth white plaster and sits at seat height, making it functional as informal poolside seating when the water feature is off. The pool house was re-clad in white stucco with aluminum-framed glass folding doors, replacing the original hip-roofed structure with cedar shingles. Warm-toned wood slats on the pergola ceiling echo the teak visible inside the pool house, tying both structures together without matching them exactly.
Concrete Pavilion and White Marble Surfaces Replace Weathered Teak and Stamped Concrete

The overhead structure shifts from a steel-framed pergola to a poured concrete canopy with a wood-slat soffit, which changes the entire thermal and visual weight of the space. Below it, a marble-top dining table paired with linen-cushioned teak chairs replaces the bare wood set from before. Matching white ceramic planters anchor the pool corners, and the pool house gets a flat-roof concrete facade with sliding glass doors.
Marble Surround and White Pool House Pull a Backyard Out of the 2000s

Polished white porcelain pavers replace stamped concrete, running wall-to-wall beneath navy-cushioned chaise lounges and a rectangular dining set with slim white frames. A built-in outdoor kitchen anchors the left side in marble slab.
How the Pool House Redesign Anchors the Entire Composition
The original pool house carried a cedar shake hip roof and beige stucco walls that read as an afterthought behind the main pool. Replacing it with a flat-roofed white structure finished in smooth painted cladding and fitted with French doors gives the rear elevation a deliberate architectural endpoint. Potted topiaries flanking the entry reinforce the symmetry that runs through the rest of the space.
Brushed Teak and a Pool House Reboot Replace Stamped Concrete and Gray Pergola

Sandstone-format paving in a warm buff tone replaces the old stamped concrete deck, running edge-to-edge without grout breaks to give the yard a cleaner read from above. A rectangular pool with an attached spa sits flush to the new deck, fed by a low-profile spillway rather than the previous raised coping detail. On the left, a built-in outdoor kitchen uses white cabinetry with a thick stone countertop and an integrated gas grill, replacing the covered Weber unit that sat unanchored on the old deck.
At the far end, a pool house with a flat roof, bifold timber-framed doors, and louvered shutters takes over from the cedar-shingle hip-roof structure. White render on the exterior walls keeps the palette tight. Dining furniture shifts to a long teak table with upholstered side chairs, and a low daybed with teak framing anchors the right side of the deck.
- Flat-roof pool house with bifold doors draws the eye back without blocking tree views
- Built-in kitchen cabinet run consolidates grill, prep surface, and storage into one fixed unit
- Rectangular spa positioned at pool corner keeps the footprint compact while adding a water feature element
White Plaster, Spa Addition, and a Flat-Roof Cabana Reboot a Wooded Backyard

Poured concrete decking in large-format white tile replaced stamped concrete and a wood pergola, giving the entire pool surround a clean, monolithic quality. A detached cabana with floor-to-ceiling glass panels and a flat roof sits where the old hip-roofed pool house stood, finished in smooth white stucco.
Tubular white metal dining chairs pair with a rectangular white composite table at the near end of the deck. A built-in outdoor kitchen with a stainless steel grill anchors the left side. White ceramic planters hold ornamental trees with pale bark, echoing the white agapanthus planted along the back bed line.
Marble Tile, a Spa Addition, and Built-In Bar Replace a Dated Wood Pergola

Calcutta-style marble porcelain covers nearly every horizontal surface here, from the pool coping to the dining terrace, creating a cohesive palette that the original stamped concrete deck never achieved. Leather-strap dining chairs in cognac surround a rectangular table topped with a white ceramic vessel planting. A built-in outdoor kitchen with a stainless grill anchors the left side of the deck.
A compact spa with raised marble walls now sits directly behind the pool, fed by multiple deck jets. The poolhouse-style bar structure features marble-clad countertops, open brass shelving, and a flat concrete roof, replacing the hip-roofed beige cabana that stood in the same corner.
Trend Alert: Marble-look porcelain pavers have overtaken natural stone in high-end pool renovations largely because they resist freeze-thaw cycles better than genuine marble while still delivering the veining homeowners want. Large-format slabs in the 24×48-inch range are now the baseline expectation in luxury outdoor remodels, according to tile industry reports. Grout joint width has shrunk to near-zero in many of these projects, which amplifies the seamless slab effect across wide open decks.
Rock Waterfall Slide and Charcoal Tile Pull a Wooded Backyard Into Luxury Territory

Dark slate-format pool decking replaces stamped concrete, anchoring a geometric pool finished in deep teal mosaic tile, while a boulder-integrated water slide and built-in outdoor bar with black marble countertops redefine how the space functions.
Oval Wading Pool, Marble Decking, and a Spa Addition Retire a Pergola-Era Backyard

Veined white marble-format porcelain covers every horizontal surface here, running from the outdoor kitchen counter straight through to the spa surround without interruption. The rectangular lap pool sits in dark charcoal plaster, which makes the water read nearly black from above and creates sharp contrast against the pale stone. A separate oval wading pool with arc-jet fountains occupies the left side of the yard, finished in a geometric teal tile pattern visible through the water.
Blush velvet dining chairs with brushed gold frames surround a marble-top table at the center of the deck. The pool house behind the spa features an open-face bar with white marble cladding and copper-finish shelving hardware. Columnar arborvitae line the rear fence, replacing the open lawn visible in the before photo.
Try This: Adding a secondary shallow pool or splash pad alongside the main pool significantly increases usable square footage for households with young children or guests who prefer not to swim laps. Contractors often position it on a diagonal or offset axis to break visual symmetry and give the layout a designed-rather-than-default quality. Budget roughly 20 to 35 percent of the main pool cost for a feature like this, depending on the water feature elements included.
Marble Porcelain Decking, a Water Slide, and a Glass Pool House Retire Weathered Teak

Bookmatched white marble-look porcelain covers every horizontal surface, unifying the outdoor kitchen, rectangular lap pool, and oval wading pool under one consistent finish that the original concrete patio never achieved.
Sculptural Arches, Marble Tile, and a Pergola Demolition Reboot a Pacific Northwest Backyard

Every element of the old setup got replaced, down to the concrete underfoot.
Large-format white marble porcelain pavers now cover the entire deck where beige stamped concrete once sat, and a built-in outdoor kitchen with stainless cabinetry flanks the right side of the pool. Two freestanding white plaster arch structures frame a small wading pool behind the main rectangle, each arch housing a potted olive tree at its base. A white marble dining counter with brass-leg barstools anchors the foreground. A statue on a square plinth adds a classical note near the pool edge.
Glass-Walled Spa Block and White Porcelain Decking Retire a Pergola-Era Pool

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Aged stamped concrete and a sagging fabric pergola gave way to full white porcelain decking laid in an oversized format, running edge-to-edge without visual interruption. The pool shell received new white plaster, and a glass-sided spa block now anchors the left corner, its aqua mosaic tile visible through transparent panels at grade level.
A flat-roof pool house in white stucco with floor-to-ceiling sliding glass replaced the old cedar-shake cabana. Built-in outdoor kitchen cabinetry in white runs along the right perimeter, topped with what appears to be a light quartz surface. White powder-coated dining chairs and a round table with a ceramic top sit centered on axis with the pool.
Common Mistake: Homeowners often replace an aging pool house before addressing the deck surface, but because pool house footings frequently tie into the surrounding concrete, sequencing the deck work first can prevent cracking at the transition joint and save a second round of cutting and patching later.
Outdoor Movie Screen, Fire Bowls, and a Modern Pool House Retire Stamped Concrete and Teak
Warm-toned stamped concrete and wood patio furniture gave way to white-plaster pool coping, gray porcelain deck tiles, and a flat-roof pool house finished in smooth white stucco with recessed soffit lighting. The original L-shaped pool was rebuilt as a rectangular lap-style volume with an attached raised spa, both lit from within by LED strip lighting that turns the water a vivid aquamarine after dark.
A large-format projection screen anchored to a steel frame sits flush against the rear lawn, aimed directly down the pool’s length. Paired fire bowls on concrete pedestals flank the right side of the deck, and low-profile white upholstered lounge chairs replace the weathered teak dining set that occupied the same space before.
Material Matters: White stucco pool houses with flat roofs and recessed soffit lighting have largely replaced pitched cedar-shingle structures in Pacific Northwest renovations because the flat roof allows clean integration of LED downlights without exposed conduit. The continuous soffit band also creates a visual line that draws the eye across the full width of the structure, making a modest square footage read as a longer, more deliberate architectural element.
Not every renovation centers on the pool itself — sometimes the surrounding entertainment zone does the heavier lifting.
Outdoor Cinema Wall, Caramel Leather Seating, and Navy Tile Retire a Teak Pergola

Travertine-format porcelain pavers replace the original stamped concrete, running in a grid pattern across the entire deck. Navy blue mosaic tile lines the pool interior, a sharp departure from the previous pale plaster finish. At the far end, a poured concrete structure houses a built-in projection screen framed by clean vertical reveals. The seating arrangement consists of caramel leather club chairs with brass-finished legs, set in two symmetrical rows facing the screen. A marble-clad outdoor kitchen anchors the left side, fitted with stainless appliances and a wood-burning pizza oven.
Marble Decking, a Sculptural Spa Block, and a Glass Pavilion Retire a Pergola-Era Pool

White marble-format porcelain covers the entire deck in a large-grid pattern, replacing the original concrete surround with a surface that reads closer to a European hotel than a suburban backyard. The rectangular pool now features bright aqua tile and a clean rectilinear shape, cutting ties with the original kidney-influenced design.
A freestanding sculptural water feature anchors the left side of the lawn, while a rebuilt pool house clad in black aluminum framing and floor-to-ceiling glass panels replaces the old pitched cedar-shingle structure. White upholstered outdoor chairs surround a marble-topped counter with a built-in stainless grill integrated flush into the cabinetry.
Designer’s Secret: Glass-walled pool houses create a visual extension of the pool’s footprint because the transparency pulls the water’s reflection into the structure itself, making the pavilion appear larger than its actual square footage. Designers often specify black powder-coated aluminum frames specifically because the dark profile disappears against the tree line rather than competing with the white deck surface.
Emerald Tile, a Sport Court Addition, and Gray Porcelain Retire Stamped Concrete and Teak

Gray large-format porcelain pavers replace the original stamped concrete throughout, running continuously from the outdoor kitchen counter edge to the pool coping without a grout line break. The rectangular pool is finished in emerald green mosaic tile, a sharp contrast to the pale blue water of the before photo. A built-in spa block sits flush with the pool deck at the near corner, tiled in the same green mosaic. The pool house shifts from a pitched cedar-shingle structure to a flat-roof unit clad in dark gray panels with bifold doors that retract fully into the wall.
Seating scales up considerably. A solid teak dining table seats ten under no overhead structure, replacing the pergola entirely. Leather-wrapped dining chairs in caramel brown line both sides. A sport court with blue acrylic surface and regulation basketball hoop occupies the far left corner where lawn once sat. The outdoor kitchen gains a wood-fired pizza oven alongside a stainless gas grill, both set into a gray stone counter.
Concrete Pool House, Sculptural Spa Block, and Caramel Leather Retire Teak and Stamped Concrete

Brushed limestone-look porcelain covers the entire deck in the after photo, replacing the buff stamped concrete that dominated the before. Gone too is the gray aluminum pergola over a teak dining set. In its place, a rectangular dining table in bleached concrete finish seats eight in cognac leather chairs with tubular steel frames.
A raised square spa block sits to the left of the pool, clad in matching porcelain with a thin recirculating spillway lip. The pool house behind it is now a flat-roofed concrete structure with full-height sliding glass panels, replacing the pitched hip-roof stucco pavilion. A sculptural bronze arch rises from the pool’s far end, anchoring the sightline from the outdoor kitchen, which features a stainless grill set into white marble composite cabinetry.
A sculptural bronze arch rises from the pool’s far end, anchoring the sightline from the outdoor kitchen.
Clay Tennis Court, Marble Pool Surround, and Rose Gold Accents Retire Stamped Concrete

Calacatta-style marble porcelain covers every horizontal surface here, running from the outdoor kitchen counter straight to the pool coping without a single grout line interruption. Pink velvet barrel chairs with rose gold legs ring a marble dining table positioned just steps from the water’s edge. The pool itself is finished in cobalt blue mosaic tile, a sharp contrast to the light stone surround. Two raised spa basins flank the main pool on the far end, each clad in matching blue tile.
On the left, a full outdoor kitchen includes a stainless grill, a wood-fired pizza oven in a matte spherical form, and marble countertops with brass-toned hardware. A clay tennis court with perimeter lighting occupies the rear left corner, expanding the property’s recreational footprint well beyond the pool zone. The pool house was rebuilt with flat marble cladding and open shelving visible through sliding glass panels.
Golf Simulator Pavilion, Caramel Leather Chairs, and Emerald Tile Retire a Pergola-Era Pool

The old setup leaned heavily on weathered teak and a covered pergola that shaded the dining area without doing much else. A freestanding metal grill under a dust cover completed the picture of a backyard that had simply stopped evolving.
The renovation stripped that back entirely. Cream-toned porcelain decking now runs poolside alongside a built-in outdoor kitchen with marble-slab countertops and brushed brass hardware. Caramel leather dining chairs surround a stone-top table. Most notably, a flat-roof pavilion houses a full golf simulator with a floor-to-ceiling projection screen, visible from the pool deck.
Fun Fact: Outdoor golf simulators have moved from commercial venues into private residential builds at a notable pace over the past five years, with high-end units now designed specifically for covered exterior structures that experience temperature swings. Unlike a standard media wall, a simulator pavilion requires a minimum ceiling clearance of ten feet to accommodate a full driver swing, which drives the architectural footprint considerably larger than a typical cabana. That structural demand is what separates a true simulator addition from a simple projection screen setup.
Pickleball Court, Slate Porcelain Decking, and a Glass Cabana Retire a Pergola-Era Pool

Dark slate-format porcelain covers the entire pool surround, replacing the original stamped concrete with a surface that reads closer to honed basalt than ceramic. A freestanding rectangular pool takes the place of the older kidney-adjacent shape, fitted with a flush spillway and bright blue tile that catches light differently from every angle. The outdoor kitchen runs along the left side in white marble slab countertops set against matte black cabinetry framing.
Behind the pool, a glass-and-steel cabana with open bifold panels houses a backlit bar with white marble shelving. Modern white chairs surround a black rectangular dining table centered on the deck. A pickleball court occupies the far left, enclosed behind black powder-coated fencing that ties into the cabana’s steel framing.
Did You Know: Pickleball courts are appearing in residential backyard renovations at a faster rate than tennis courts, largely because their smaller footprint fits within standard suburban lot dimensions. A regulation pickleball court measures 20 by 44 feet, compared to 36 by 78 feet for a doubles tennis court, making the sport-court addition viable for properties that could never accommodate a tennis build.
Rock Climbing Wall, Pizza Oven, and Lap Pool Geometry Retire a Teak Pergola

Polished marble-look porcelain in a large slab format covers the entire deck, replacing stamped concrete that had gone beige with age. A built-in outdoor kitchen runs along the left side, anchored by a commercial-grade grill and a wood-fired pizza oven with a matte black flue. Directly beside it, a rock climbing wall finished in textured concrete panel adds a vertical element that reads more like sculpture than sport equipment.
Rectangular lap pool geometry replaces the freeform original, with integrated in-pool seating ledges visible through the blue water. A flat-roofed pool house clad in board-formed concrete sits at the rear, open on one side to expose gym equipment inside. Charcoal upholstered dining chairs surround a marble-top table at pool’s edge, and a low sectional with matching fabric anchors the far right corner.
Veined Marble Decking, Gold-Frame Dining, and a Glass Pool House Retire Cedar Shingles

Bookmatched white-and-gray veined porcelain covers every horizontal surface, running from the outdoor dining area straight to the pool coping without a seam break. Eight ivory barrel chairs on brass-finish legs surround a slab-top table where the stone pattern continues uninterrupted. Behind the pool, a two-story structure clad in Calacatta-veined marble panels rises above floor-to-ceiling glass walls, replacing the cedar-shingle pool house visible in the before photo.
History Corner: The pergola, one of the oldest known outdoor structures, dates back to ancient Egyptian gardens around 1400 BCE, where it was used to support climbing vines over walkways. Romans later adopted the form extensively, building elaborate versions in villa gardens throughout the empire. By the twentieth century, the backyard pergola had become so common in suburban construction that its presence often signals an unrenovated outdoor space rather than a deliberate design choice.
Lap Pool Geometry, Travertine Pavers, and a Flat-Roof Cabana Retire Cedar Shingles and Teak

Honed travertine decking in a large-format running bond replaces the original stamped concrete, and a rectangular lap pool with a mosaic amber tile finish sits flush against the surround rather than floating above it. Caramel leather sling loungers line the right side in a tight row, while a built-in stainless outdoor kitchen anchors the left. Behind the pool, a flat-roof pool house with open bays and board-formed concrete columns replaces the old cedar-shingle pavilion entirely.
Quick Fix: Swapping pool interior plaster or vinyl for small-format mosaic tile is one of the few renovations that changes pool color without altering water chemistry or depth. Darker tile colors absorb more heat, which can raise water temperature by several degrees on sunny days without additional heating costs. Homeowners considering the switch should verify that their existing pool shell is structurally sound before tiling, since mosaic applications add weight and require a stable substrate.
Veined Marble Dining, a Flat-Roof Pavilion, and Dark Pool Tile Retire Cedar Shingles and Teak
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Bookmatched white-and-gray veined marble porcelain covers the entire deck surface, replacing the original stamped concrete in a format that reads closer to a hotel terrace than a residential backyard. Rounded gray upholstered dining chairs surround a slab-top outdoor table with matching marble finish, while a built-in stainless grill station anchors the left side of the patio. The pool itself was relined in near-black tile that reads deep navy under direct sunlight, a finish that makes the water appear far deeper than the original light-plaster shell ever did.
A flat-roof pavilion with full-height glass panels now occupies the left rear corner, housing lounge seating and what appears to be a projection screen. The original cedar-shingle pool house was retained but converted into a bar structure, its open garage-style door framing shelving and glassware visible from the dining area. Flowering white hydrangeas and a Japanese maple add plant contrast against the dark fencing without competing with the hardscape geometry.
- Near-black pool tile absorbs heat differently than light plaster, which can raise water temperature by several degrees in direct sun climates
- Converting an existing pool house into a dedicated bar structure avoids the permitting complexity of new construction while adding significant entertainment function
- Rounded outdoor upholstery in solution-dyed acrylic fabric resists UV fading significantly longer than standard polyester-filled patio cushions
Copper-Bottom Lap Pool, Marble Island Bar, and Glass Enclosure Retire Cedar Shingles and Teak

Amber-glazed tile lines the lap pool’s interior, casting a copper-bronze reflection across the terracotta-toned paver deck, while a marble-topped outdoor kitchen island with bar seating replaces the old covered pergola dining set entirely.
Viola-Veined Marble Decking, a Glass Pavilion, and Cobalt Mosaic Retire Cedar Shingles and Teak

Viola-veined marble porcelain covers every horizontal surface here, from the pool deck to the outdoor kitchen countertop, running the pattern continuously so the eye reads the space as one connected plane. The pool interior switches from plain plaster to cobalt-blue small-format mosaic tile, deepening the water color to a near-indigo that reads sharply against the white marble surround. Rounded white upholstered dining chairs replace the old teak set beneath a minimal metal-frame table.
The pool house facade receives a full marble cladding treatment that mirrors the deck material, erasing the former beige stucco entirely. A glass-walled pavilion addition anchors the left side, its floor-to-ceiling panels framing an interior dining space with pendant lighting and what appears to be a built-in wine display. A stainless steel grill set into the marble outdoor kitchen island replaces the covered freestanding gas unit that sat on the old stamped concrete.
Budget Tip: Replicating the continuous marble-look across deck and pool house facade does not require matching slabs cut from the same quarry block. Ordering large-format porcelain tiles from a single production run achieves a consistent vein pattern at a fraction of the cost of natural stone, and the material holds up better against pool chemical splash and UV exposure over time.
Green Marble Decking, an Outdoor Kitchen Island, and Lap Pool Geometry Retire Teak and Stamped Concrete

Forest green marble tile covers every horizontal surface here, running from the outdoor kitchen counter through the dining area and poolside lounge without interruption. The rectangular lap pool replaces an irregular shape, and its walls are finished in small-format aqua mosaic that shifts the water from pale blue to saturated teal. A flat-roof pool house with green marble cladding and a recessed bar replaces the old pitched-shingle structure.
Seating at the long dining table is upholstered in off-white, which keeps the green palette from reading too heavy. The outdoor kitchen includes a dedicated pizza oven column and a gas grill built into a marble-faced island with bar-height stools on one side. A white sculptural figure anchors the far right corner, giving the eye a resting point against the dense evergreen backdrop.
Cognac Leather Dining, a Linear Reflecting Pool, and Fire Bowls Retire Stamped Concrete

Warm amber LED strip lighting runs beneath every horizontal surface here, including the marble dining table edge, the pool coping, and the low kitchen counter fascia, creating a glow that reads as built into the architecture rather than added after the fact. The table itself sits on what appears to be a slab of emperador brown marble, and the seating is cognac leather with a low-profile frame. A large teardrop pendant in amber glass hangs centered above the dining zone.
A long narrow reflecting pool replaces the original kidney-shaped swim pool, running from the dining terrace straight toward a pool house finished in warm stone cladding. Fire bowls flank the central walkway on both sides. The pool house interior, visible through wide glass doors, holds lounge seating in burnt orange and an illuminated back bar. Two separate covered pavilions anchor the left and right sides, each fitted with linear gas fireplace inserts and sectional seating.
Calacatta Marble Decking, Velvet Round Chairs, and a Giant Chess Board Retire Stamped Concrete

Calacatta-veined marble tiles cover every horizontal surface, running from the outdoor kitchen counter straight through to the pool coping, while cognac velvet barrel chairs ring a slab dining table topped with a single white floral arrangement.
Padel Court, Pizza Oven, and Dark Marble Decking Retire Stamped Concrete and Teak

Gold-veined black marble tile covers both the deck and the outdoor kitchen counters, unifying the two zones without a visual break. Blue velvet barstools with brass frames line an island counter, and a wood-fired pizza oven anchors the left side of the kitchen alongside a built-in wine cooler. The pool shifts from the original freeform shape to a strict rectangle lined with cobalt mosaic tile, and a glass-fenced padel court claims the lawn where the hot tub once sat.
Blue Azul Marble Decking, a Sand Volleyball Court, and Cobalt Mosaic Retire Teak and Stamped Concrete

Blue Azul porcelain pavers with white veining cover the entire deck and dining table surface in one continuous pattern, anchored by a rectangular lap pool finished in cobalt small-format mosaic tile. White powder-coated dining chairs and matching chaise lounges keep the furniture palette tight against the blue field, while a built-in outdoor kitchen with stainless grill occupies the left corner.
Limestone Decking, a Wall Fountain, and Wrought-Iron Dining Retire Stamped Concrete and Teak

Creamy limestone pavers replace the old stamped concrete, while wrought-iron chairs with circular motifs surround a slab dining table topped with a terracotta pot of white florals.
Dark Pool House, Linear Spa, and Large-Format Pavers Retire Stamped Concrete and Teak

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Charcoal-framed glass panels wrap the rebuilt pool house, replacing the original cedar-shingle hip roof with a flat dark canopy and recessed soffit strip lighting. Smoke-gray large-format porcelain pavers cover the entire deck, and a separate rectangular spa with blue LED lighting sits flush to the pool’s right edge. Molded black resin chairs surround a planter-center dining table at the foreground, while a built-in stainless grill station anchors the left corner.
Travertine Decking, a Flat-Roof Pool House, and Fountain Jets Retire Cedar Shingles and Stamped Concrete

Cream travertine pavers replace the old stamped concrete surround, while cognac leather dining chairs and a marble-top table sit directly on axis with the pool’s center fountain jets.
Teak and Pergola Give Way to Concrete Pool House, Spa Channel, and Cognac Dining

Brushed concrete cladding replaces the old cedar-shingle pool house, now fitted with floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors and a green roof planted with low sedums. Rectangular pool geometry shifts to deep teal mosaic tile, while a narrow spa channel runs perpendicular along the left edge. Live-edge walnut dining seats ten on cognac leather chairs with matte black frames, anchored beside an integrated concrete outdoor kitchen with a stainless grill and undermount sink.
Green Marble Slab Dining, Mosaic Lap Pool, and Fire Channel Retire Cedar Shingles and Teak

Emerald-veined marble clads both the outdoor dining table base and the pool’s raised perimeter walls, while teal glass mosaic tile lines the lap pool interior, casting aquatic light across the stone decking at night.
