Lalo's Tile & Coping

Southlake / Spa and Water Features

Pool Spa and Water Features in Southlake

Raised spillover spas, sheer descents, bubblers, and grotto features built into Southlake pools, usually as part of a remodel.

A spa or water feature in Southlake is usually folded into a pool remodel rather than built on its own. We build spas and water features into existing pools, a raised spillover spa, sheer descents off a raised wall, bubblers on a tanning ledge, deck jets, and rock or grotto features. On the bigger backyards here there is room to do several at once and tie them into one project.

The centerpiece is usually a raised spa that spills back into the pool. We build the spa shell, the raised wall, and the spillway, set the tile and coping, and coordinate the plumbing and gas heater through a licensed trade. A spillover spa adds the sound of moving water to the pool even when no one is in it, which carries a large backyard well.

The features themselves run from the architectural to the natural. Sheer descents drop a clean sheet of water off a raised wall, bubblers sit low on a tanning ledge, and deck jets arc water from the deck into the pool. For a more natural look we build rock and grotto features. Glass tile is the finish of choice on raised walls and spa faces, often iridescent or hand-blended so it catches light and gives the water depth.

Because all of this shares plumbing and a drained pool, the time to do it is during a pool remodel rather than as a separate dig later. We match the spa and feature tile to the coping and the deck so it reads as one design. See the full range of pool work or our Southlake services. Fill out the form for a free on-site estimate. We measure it, we quote it.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Usually, yes. The common build is a raised spa that spills back into the pool. The work shares plumbing and a drained pool with a remodel, so the best time to add it is during one rather than as a separate dig.

Sheer descents off a raised wall, bubblers on a tanning ledge, deck jets, and rock or grotto features. On the larger Southlake yards there is room to combine several into one design.

Yes. It shares the same drain and plumbing, so doing it during a [pool remodel](/areas/southlake/pool-remodel) costs less than coming back later and keeps the tile and stone matched.

Glass tile, often iridescent or hand-blended, because it catches light and gives the water depth. We match it to the coping and deck so the spa and features read as one design.

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Pool tile and coping insights from over 20 years working across Dallas-Fort Worth.

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