Help - Pressure of a Pool on concrete

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the feasibility and safety concerns of installing a pool in an apartment living room, specifically focusing on the weight of the water and its impact on the concrete structure of the building. Participants explore various factors including structural integrity, building codes, and potential risks associated with such an installation.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant calculates the weight of the water in the pool to be approximately 5,908 lbs (2,680 kg) and questions whether the concrete can support this weight.
  • Another participant emphasizes the variability of concrete strength based on factors like rebar, mixture, and slab thickness, suggesting that structural documents should be consulted.
  • A different viewpoint suggests that the strength of the overall structure is more critical than just the concrete strength, noting that the load may exceed safety margins required by building codes.
  • One participant shares a cautionary anecdote about a failed engineering project due to miscalculations regarding weight, highlighting the importance of proper engineering assessments.
  • Concerns are raised about potential water damage to lower apartments, the need for chemical treatment of the water, and the implications of increased humidity in the living space.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the safety and feasibility of the pool installation, with no consensus reached on whether it is advisable or safe to proceed.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the lack of specific structural details about the apartment building and the absence of professional engineering assessments. The discussion also does not resolve the implications of water treatment and humidity control.

zx82
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Hello, I have a friend that would like to put a pool in his livign room but is concerned about the weight of the pool...he lives in an apartment building so in between each floor it's concrete

the pool holds 705 gallons (2680 litres) and its diameter is 9 feet and the water will be 21 inches high...i figured that 2680 litres weighs 5,908lbs or 2,680 kilograms...also the area taht this weight will be on is about 63.6 feet (pi x r = 4.5^2) however i don't know how strong concrete is and whether it will be able to sustain this weight (which seems like a lot to me)

any help on this would be appreciated or even a final answer so that my friend can avoid a lawsuit!
 
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Welcome to PF!

If he lives in an apartment building, I'm sure there are rules regarding what he's allowed to put in, anyway. If he's planning on building a pool, then there needs to be a way to drain the thing.

The strength of concrete varies on a great deal of variables, including rebar used, specific mixture of the concrete, and the thickness of the slab. You'll have to consult the structural documents after your friend's landlord says no.
 
thanks

thanks i'll get I am to try and get his hands on the structural documents and take it from there...to me it sounds like an awful lot of weight but i know that concrete is very strong so i'll see what he finds out...he already bought the pool its a plastic one for kids that's meant for backyards and what not...
 
The strength of the concrete isn't a factor. Its the strength of the structure. An engineer will build the structure to meet local building codes and to have a certain margin of safety but any more adds to costs quickly.

There are commercial structures that have been built over the years by certified engineers with inspections for code compliance to make every effort to ensure safety, yet failures do happen (watch Discovery channel, they have shows just on engineering disasters). To speculate seems to be a dangerous gamble, and from what I remember of what my civil eng prof said that sounds like 2.5X the load required by code. In other words, maybe not just walking the fine line but jumping right over it to add nearly three tons of weight. And for kids?! I'd re-consider.

Cliff
 
Reminds me of the swimming pool which started being built at Loughborough university. The design was for a pool on stilts, so that an access route underneath the pool could be maintained. The building work started, and it was only when the stilts had been cast and an onlooker commented on the stilts' slenderness that the project engineer realized his calculations had accounted for an empty swimming pool!

The project was abandoned, but the concrete stilts are still there as a reminder to the engineering department...
 
Uh...
If he does it, try to hang around with a video camera. I'm sure you can make a few bucks when the disaster hits.

Njorl
 
Several other big concerns for this project:

The fact that he is planning on placing 705 gallons of water above the living rooms of other people. The potential for damge just from casual water leaving the pool is pretty high (splashing, jumping in, etc). A large scale failure of the pool could be very costly.

Also, is he planning to chemically treat the water? If he is, chlorine is corrosive and requires special ventilation. If he is not, he will need to drain the pool frequently (day or two at most).

Furthermore, he is adding a large water surface to an interior environment, this will raise the humidity level of the space considerably also requiring special ventilation.
 

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