The pool is in. Now comes the part most homeowners underestimate: the landscaping around it. The coping, the paving, the planting, the fencing, these aren't afterthoughts. They determine whether your pool area looks and functions like a resort or like a building site that never quite got finished.
Here's what to consider when designing the landscaping around a Melbourne pool.
Pool coping: the most important decision you'll make
Coping is the material that caps the pool edge. It affects how the pool looks, how safe it is underfoot when wet, and how much maintenance you'll do for the next twenty years. Get this wrong and there's no easy fix.
Travertine is the classic choice and still one of the best. It stays cool underfoot even in full Melbourne summer sun, has a natural non-slip texture, and suits both contemporary and traditional homes. Needs sealing and periodic maintenance.
Porcelain in a textured outdoor grade is the low-maintenance option. Doesn't need sealing, handles chlorine splash well, and can be specified in large format for a seamless look. Specify a slip-resistance rating of P4 or higher for pool surrounds.
Bluestone works beautifully around pools in Melbourne homes, it's our local stone and it ages gracefully. Honed bluestone can be slippery when wet, so specify a sandblasted or flamed finish for pool areas.
Timber decking around pools has its advocates and its critics. Hardwood like merbau handles wet environments well but requires oiling. Composite decking is the practical choice, no maintenance, no splinters, stays looking good for years.
Pool paving: what to consider beyond looks
The paving around your pool takes a beating. Constant water, chlorine splash, heavy foot traffic, and full sun exposure. Here's what actually matters:
- Slip resistance: Minimum P3 rating for pool surrounds, P4 for areas where water pools. This isn't optional, it's a safety and liability issue.
- Heat: Dark materials get dangerously hot in Melbourne summer. If your pool area faces north or west, stick to light tones.
- Drainage: Pool surrounds need to drain away from the pool and away from the house. Poor drainage creates slippery algae buildup and water ingress issues.
- Chemical resistance: Chlorine splash, salt water systems and pool chemicals will degrade some materials over time. Porcelain and travertine handle this well. Some natural stones don't.
Planting around Melbourne pools
Plants and pools coexist beautifully when you choose the right species. They also create expensive problems when you don't.
Avoid near pools: Anything that drops excessive leaf litter (gums, deciduous trees), anything with invasive root systems that can crack paving or damage pool infrastructure, and anything with thorns or irritating sap near a barefoot zone.
Good choices for Melbourne pool surrounds:
- Lomandra, tough, low maintenance, architectural form, handles full sun and reflected heat.
- Agapanthus, classic pool plant, robust, doesn't drop mess.
- Westringia, native, tough, responds well to clipping into low hedges.
- Ornamental grasses, Pennisetum and Miscanthus add movement without creating maintenance headaches.
- Clipped hedges, Murraya, Box, or Lilly Pilly create privacy screening and formal structure without the mess.
Potted plants are a good solution near pool edges, they give you flexibility, can be moved for cleaning, and keep roots well away from the pool structure.
Pool fencing in Melbourne
Pool fencing in Victoria is governed by strict regulations. All pools must be fenced to separate them from the house and any other structures. The requirements cover fence height, gate latch specifications, and setback from the pool edge.
Frameless glass fencing is the premium choice, it preserves the view, doesn't compete visually with the pool design, and looks exceptional. Semi-frameless glass is a cost-effective alternative. Aluminium pool fencing meets compliance at a lower price point but doesn't have the same visual impact.
Whatever you choose, make sure your installer is across current Victorian pool fencing regulations. Requirements have changed in recent years and non-compliant fencing is both a safety risk and a liability.
The mistake most people make
Treating the pool landscaping as a separate project from the pool installation. When the pool goes in and the landscaping is done later, you often end up with compromises, drainage that doesn't integrate properly, coping that was specified without seeing the finished pool, planting that doesn't account for how the space actually gets used.
The best pool landscapes are designed as a whole: pool, coping, paving, fencing, and planting all considered together before a single thing gets built. That's how you end up with something that looks intentional rather than assembled over time.
Planning pool landscaping in Melbourne?
Edge Landscapes builds pool surrounds across Melbourne, coping, paving, fencing, and planting as a complete, precision-built package.
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