Below: verified Custom Pool Builders serving Oakland Estates, followed by guidance specific to this neighborhood.

Vetted Custom Pool Builders Serving Oakland Estates

American Pools & Spas

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CPC1460475 23 yrs in business
(407) 847-9322

7320 Narcoossee Road, Orlando, FL 32822

Central Florida custom pool builder (CPC1460475) with 23+ years designing inground pools, spas, screen enclosures, outdoor kitchens, and pavers throughout Seminole County. Commercial and residential pools.

  • Inground pools
  • Spas
  • Screen enclosures
  • Outdoor kitchens
  • Pool remodeling
  • Commercial pools

Aqua Custom Pools & Spas, LLC

✓ Verified May 2026 14 yrs in business
(407) 707-6662

1344 S Narcoossee Road, Suite 105, Saint Cloud, FL 34771

Central Florida outdoor living design-build firm since 2012. Specializes in custom gunite pools, lagoon and geometric designs, rockwork, infinity edges, fire features, spas, and outdoor kitchens across Seminole County.

  • Custom gunite pools
  • Infinity pools
  • Lagoon pools
  • Rockwork & waterfalls
  • Spas
  • Outdoor kitchens

Presidential Pools & Spas

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CPC1457753 31 yrs in business
(407) 894-4000

3208 W State Road 426, Oviedo, FL 32765

One of Central Florida's largest custom pool builders (CPC1457753), designing and constructing inground pools, screen enclosures, outdoor kitchens, and complete backyard environments throughout Seminole County since 1994. Showroom in Oviedo.

  • Custom inground pools
  • Screen enclosures
  • Outdoor kitchens
  • Spas
  • Pool automation
  • LED lighting
  • Travertine decking

Trilogy Pools & Spas

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CPC1459182 16 yrs in business
(407) 831-7665

1000 Douglas Avenue, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714

Altamonte Springs-based custom pool builder (CPC1459182) specializing in residential inground pools, fiberglass pool installations, and pool renovations throughout Seminole County. Three-stage construction process with dedicated project managers for each build.

  • Custom concrete pools
  • Fiberglass pools
  • Pool renovations
  • Screen enclosures
  • Salt systems
  • Variable-speed pumps
  • Pebble finishes
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About Oakland Estates

Typical home era: 1960s–1970s

ZIP code: 32701

Oakland Estates is a small, established residential subdivision in central Altamonte Springs, with mid-century single-family homes and easy access to the SR 436 corridor.

Notable features:

  • Established residential pocket
  • Central Altamonte location
  • Convenient SR 436 access

Frequently Asked Questions

What lot factors should Oakland Estates homeowners evaluate before planning a pool?
Key pre-planning checks for Oakland Estates lots: property survey or lot dimensions to verify usable rear yard depth after Seminole County setbacks (typically 7.5 feet from side and rear property lines for residential pools — confirm current code with your contractor); utility easements that may restrict construction; overhead utility lines that affect equipment staging; and any recorded deed restrictions from the original subdivision covenants. Oakland Estates' 1960s-era plats may have utility easements along rear property lines that weren't as consistently visible in modern digital records. Your pool contractor should pull a survey or use the county GIS system to identify these constraints before finalizing the design.
What is a realistic pool size for an Oakland Estates lot?
Oakland Estates' rear yards vary considerably — some lots have generous depth, others are constrained. A pool footprint of 300–450 sq ft (12×28 to 14×32 feet) with a modest surrounding deck and screen enclosure fits most Oakland Estates lots that have adequate rear yard depth. If the rear yard is shallow, a plunge pool or cocktail pool design (10×20 feet or smaller) can provide swimming and cooling value in a compact footprint. Your contractor's site assessment should include a scaled drawing showing the pool, deck, screen enclosure, and property lines to confirm setback compliance before any permits are pulled.
How long does pool construction take in Seminole County for an Oakland Estates home?
The total timeline from contract signing to a swim-ready pool in Seminole County typically runs 3–5 months: permit preparation and issuance (3–6 weeks), excavation and steel (1–2 weeks), plumbing and electrical rough (1 week), shotcrete or gunite (1 day plus cure time of 2–4 weeks), deck and coping (1–2 weeks), screen enclosure (1–2 weeks), plaster/pebble interior finish (1 day plus startup), and equipment startup and water chemistry balance (1 week). The longest variable is permit issuance, which can stretch during post-hurricane demand surges. Ask your contractor for a current realistic timeline — an honest answer reflects current permit office workloads.
What pool design features are popular for Oakland Estates homeowners?
For Oakland Estates' lot sizes and demographic profile, popular pool features include: screened enclosures (standard for Central Florida — keeps insects out, reduces evaporation, partially filters UV); salt chlorine generators (lower ongoing chemical cost versus traditional chlorine, gentler on eyes and skin); LED color-changing lighting (relatively low cost upgrade with high visual impact); sun shelves/tanning ledges (shallow entry for lounging, also useful for small children); and variable-speed pool pumps (required by Florida energy code for new pools, reduce operating costs significantly versus single-speed). Heated pools add $3,000–$7,000 to construction cost but extend the comfortable swimming season into November and March in Central Florida.
What should Oakland Estates homeowners know about pool permits and inspections?
Seminole County requires a building permit for all in-ground pool construction, and the permit process involves multiple inspections: setback verification before excavation; steel reinforcement before shotcrete; underground plumbing and electrical; bonding/grounding; barrier/fence compliance (Florida requires pool barriers with specific gate and latch standards — important for homes with children); and final inspection before the pool is filled. Your contractor is responsible for scheduling all inspections. Do not allow work to proceed between required inspections without proper inspector sign-off — this creates problems at final and can require demolition and re-work if earlier phases weren't inspected. The permit documentation should be retained after the project closes.

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