A swimming pool is a hospitality amenity for users and an MEP integration challenge for designers. Filtration sets pump and pipe sizes; pool heating sets a substantial load on the boiler/heat-pump; dehumidification on indoor pools is the difference between a comfortable natatorium and a fogged glass enclosure with corroded steel.
This guide covers the four MEP streams that determine pool design: filtration turnover, water heating, dehumidification, and make-up.
Filtration turnover
Pool water must be turned over (the entire pool volume passing through the filtration system) at intervals defined by ASHRAE and FINA based on use:
| Pool type | Recommended turnover (hours) |
|---|---|
| Competition / Olympic | 6 |
| Hotel / club | 6-8 |
| Residential | 8-10 |
| Therapy / spa pool | 0.5-1.0 |
| Wading / kid’s pool | 1-2 |
For a 25 m × 12 m × 1.4 m hotel pool (volume = 420 m³) with 8-hour turnover:
Q_filter = 420 / 8 = 52.5 m³/h = ~14.6 L/s = ~230 gpm
This sets the filtration pump and main suction/return line sizing. Pump head is determined by pool height (suction lift), filter pressure drop (8-15 m WC at design), heat exchanger drop, and balance valves — typically 15-25 m total. Pump power for the example: ~3.5 kW.
Filter media and chemical balance
Two main filtration types:
Sand filters: simple, low cost, good for residential and hotel. Typical filtration efficiency 5-25 microns; require backwashing every 2-7 days using ~5% of pool volume each cycle.
DE (Diatomaceous Earth) or cartridge filters: higher efficiency (1-5 microns), used in spa and competition pools. Less backwash water but more complex maintenance.
Chemical dosing controls:
- Free chlorine: 1.0-3.0 mg/L (residential), 2.0-5.0 mg/L (commercial)
- pH: 7.2-7.6
- Alkalinity: 80-120 mg/L
- Cyanuric acid (outdoor): 30-50 mg/L
Automatic dosing systems (chlorinator + acid feeder + ORP/pH controller) are standard for any commercial pool. Capex ~₹2-4 lakh; replaces the labour-intensive manual dosing.
Pool heating load
Pool heating is required to maintain water temperature (typically 26-28 °C indoor, 24-26 °C outdoor) against:
1. Evaporation losses — dominant term for outdoor and warm indoor pools
2. Convection losses — air at room temperature against water surface
3. Radiation losses — significant for outdoor pools at night
4. Conduction losses — to surrounding ground (small)
5. Make-up water heating — replaces evaporated water
Approximate annual heating load for a hotel indoor pool (420 m³, room 28 °C, water 27 °C):
Surface heat transfer ≈ 600-800 W/m² of pool surface
Pool surface = 25 × 12 = 300 m² → load = ~210 kW continuous
Annual energy = 210 × 8,760 × 0.6 (load factor) = ~1.1 GWh/year
This is large. Heat-pump heating (water-source or air-source) at COP 4-5 reduces operating cost vs gas/electric resistance by 70-80%. For Indian hotels, dedicated water-to-water heat pumps connected to the chiller condenser water (heat-recovery chillers) are often the lowest-lifetime-cost option.
Indoor pool dehumidification
The single most important indoor pool issue. Evaporation rate per ASHRAE Handbook:
m_evap = 0.029 × (P_water_vapor - P_air_vapor) × A_pool / h_fg (kg/h, very rough)
For 27 °C water and 28 °C / 60% RH air, evaporation ≈ 0.13-0.18 kg/(h·m²) of pool surface. For 300 m² pool:
m_evap = 0.15 × 300 = 45 kg/h water → ~110 W/m² latent heat ~= 33 kW latent load
This is on top of the sensible cooling load from the pool space (lights, occupants, fresh air). A typical 25m hotel pool needs ~50-70 kW total latent + sensible for the natatorium HVAC, far higher than a similarly-sized banquet hall.
Dedicated pool dehumidifier units handle this load specifically. They are typically packaged units with:
- Cooling coil for latent removal (refrigerant-based)
- Heat-recovery to water (regenerates pool heat from condenser)
- Outdoor air with energy recovery
- Variable-speed compressor for partial-load efficiency
Make-up water
Make-up replaces:
- Evaporation: 0.15 kg/h/m² × 300 m² = 1,080 kg/day = 1.08 m³/day
- Backwash: 5% of pool volume × 1 cycle per 5 days = 4.2 m³/5 days = 0.84 m³/day
- Splash and overflow: ~0.5-1.0% of pool volume per day = 2.1-4.2 m³/day
- Total: ~4-6 m³/day for the 420 m³ pool
Make-up should be:
- Pre-filtered (5-25 micron)
- Optionally pre-chlorinated to allow direct addition without disturbing pool chemistry
- Metered for water-tariff compliance
For Indian hospitality, 6 m³/day × 365 = 2,190 m³/year, at typical municipal water tariff this is ~₹50,000-100,000/year — small in the context of pool operating costs.
Five common pool MEP design mistakes
1. Sizing filtration pump for friction at filter only. Pool pumps must handle suction lift + filter dP + heat exchanger + dirty-filter dP. Account for end-of-life filter pressure drop (3× initial).
2. No dedicated dehumidifier on indoor pool. Conventional AHU absorbs latent at cooling coil; condensate runs from pool surface to cold aisles around glass.
3. Heat exchanger sized for normal water alone. Pool water is high in chlorine; spec PHE with corrosion-resistant plates (titanium or 316L) — copper plates fail in 18 months.
4. No expansion vessel on pool circuit. Heat-up cycle expands water by 0.5-1%; without expansion, pump cavitates.
5. Make-up direct from municipal supply without backflow protection. Pool chemistry contaminates supply if backflow occurs. RPZ device or air-gap mandatory.
Quick checklist
- [ ] Pool volume + turnover rate determined; filtration pump duty + filter sized
- [ ] Heat exchanger sized for design heat load with corrosion-resistant plates
- [ ] Heat pump or boiler selected; COP/efficiency benchmarked against alternatives
- [ ] Dedicated pool dehumidifier for indoor pools, sized for evaporation rate
- [ ] Make-up water pre-filtered, with backflow protection (RPZ valve)
- [ ] Chemical dosing system with ORP + pH automation
- [ ] Water-quality testing schedule documented
- [ ] Wall + floor finish (tile / non-slip) with proper slip rating SR-A or SR-B
References: ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Apps 2023 Ch 5 (Service Water Heating + Pools); IS 3328-2002 Code of Practice for Swimming Pools; FINA Pool Standards (Olympic/Competition).
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