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Pool Transformed Into Home Theater
An indoor pool is drained and rebuilt as a spacious, stadium-style home theater.
Pool Home Theater
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March 16, 2007 | by EH Staff

Swimming pools, even indoor ones, just aren’t all that tempting in regions where the mercury rarely reaches above 80 degrees.

So when the owners of this Wisconsin home purchased their residence, they decided to convert the indoor in-ground pool that came with the property into a fully functional home theater. Flooring and carpeting were added to the concrete bottom of the 20-by-40-foot area, and draperies were hung over the room’s windows and metal walls to soften up the space. However, not all signs of the building’s former life were removed. Wiring for the audio and video components was pulled through the pool’s existing plumbing systems, and the slope of the pool floor was maintained to create a stadium-style seating arrangement.

The concrete sides of the pool precluded speakers from being built in, so the homeowners opted for Klipsch floorstanding models. The 106-inch Draper screen was suspended from the room’s existing rafters using aircraft cabling and secured at the edge of the pool to keep the material taut. Last but not least, the Marantz video projector was mounted to the ceiling, and the audio and video components were stowed inside an equipment rack at the back of the room.

Swimming is now the last thing on the homeowners’ minds when they step into their revamped entertainment escape. Separate from the main house, the building feels like a special destination that gets more use than it ever did as a pool house.

System Design & Installation
True Aspect of Madison, WI.
www.true-aspect.com



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Comments (23) Most recent displayed first.
Posted by Brian Johnson  on  08/24/07  at  03:38 PM

It would have been a lot nicer to watch movies while in the pool.  I guess they are to lazy for that.

Posted by ed head  on  08/24/07  at  02:37 PM

i’d have made the screen about four times bigger, and gotten club chairs instead of just-like-at-the-mallplex ones. but i’m guessing it doesn’t take much to thrill y’all.

Posted by Merkidemis  on  08/24/07  at  02:31 PM

Wow, what a sad, half-assed conversion job.  Looks like they did the minimal amount possible.  Perhaps the customer wanted it to remain looking like a pool?  Is this modular so it can be put back into pool mode?  If not, this is pathetic.  At least try to mask the fact that it was a pool.  The tile is going to ruin the sound.  I’m in Madison, I should interview these guys and see if I can figure out where their heads were at.

Posted by Dave  on  05/03/07  at  09:55 PM

It’s not that everyone should buy obscure audio equipment. It’s that Bose charges a stupid amount of money for their name slapped on sub-par products. You can actually spend less and get just as good if not better than bose.

Posted by Charles Bellia  on  05/03/07  at  08:30 PM

As an A/V installer, that’s a pretty neat thing to do with an leaky indoor pool.  and for the guys who talked about Bose, There is a reason Cerwin Vega coined the phase decades ago “No highs no lows it must be Bose”.  Have you ever noticed in MOST stores Bose is never demoed with other speaker lines?  It’s because when you use a cone driver for a Tweeter/Midrange, and a Base Module that uses a transmission line port system, how much hi-fidelity can you get!  Bose is marketed to the average listening consumer, who wants to have what his friends have.


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