Fibreglass pool with paved surround at dusk
    Pool Range

    Fibreglass Pool Designs

    Round, lap, rectangular, deep or shallow — browse the whole range by shape, size, depth and colour. Every design links to a real model with a live installed price.

    30 models
    Round, lap & rectangular
    From $44,805 installed

    A fibreglass pool design is really two decisions at once: the shape and size of the moulded shell, and the style you build around it. Because our shells come out of a fixed mould, the shape options are defined and finite — a compact round plunge, a long lap corridor, a family rectangle, or a deep entertainer — and every one of them is a model you can price today.

    Below is the same 30-model range, grouped by shape, size, depth and colour. Pick the design that matters most to you and jump straight to the pools that fit. Prices are live all-inclusive installed figures for standard South East Queensland site conditions.

    By shape · Round

    Round & circular pools

    Round is the one true departure from the rectangle in fibreglass, and we build three of them. The Terrace 3 is a 3m circle with a flat, uniform floor at 1.45m — no ledge, no deep end. The Infinity 3 and Infinity 4 (3m and 4m) add a bench seat set into the rim, so you can sit in the water around the edge.

    A circle earns its place on a small or awkward block: it drops into a corner a rectangle can't use, the curved wall reads softer against planting, and the bench turns the edge into a seat. Aqua Technics certifies these as the only design-certified round fibreglass pools in the country, so they pass engineering and council the same as any pool we install.

    By shape · Rectangular

    Rectangular pools

    The rectangle is the workhorse of fibreglass, and for good reason. Clean parallel lines suit modern homes, make paving and fencing straightforward, and use a backyard's space more fully than any other shape — which is why most of our range is rectangular, just at different scales.

    From the slimline Florentina and Harmony (2.5m wide, for a side yard) through the 6m Empire to the 8m Valentina and 9m Westminster for a family, the proportions shift but the logic holds: a moulded rectangle with radiused corners, a shallow end and a deep end, ready to drop in and swim.

    By shape · T-shaped

    T-shaped pools

    Five of our shells break the rectangle with a moulded T. The crossbar gives a wide, shallower section for lounging, steps and play, while the leg runs out to a deeper end you can swim — one pool that does the entertaining and the exercise without picking a side.

    They run from the 6.5m Bellino up through the Imperial, Castello and Grandeur to the 9m Amalfi, which reaches a full 2m at the deep end. Every one comes out of a fixed mould like the rest of the range, so you get the T shape with a factory finish and none of the concrete build time.

    By use · Plunge

    Plunge pools

    A plunge pool is a design choice more than a size band: a compact shell you cool off, sit and soak in rather than swim laps in. It's the answer to a courtyard, a small block, or a spot beside the deck where a full pool would never fit.

    The slimline Allure, Sovereign and Portofino (5–5.5m) and the compact Latina and Verona (around 4.5m) are the pick of the rectangular plunges, and the round Terrace and Infinity pools plunge just as well. We also stock the Bastia — a 3.2m × 2m spa that works as a plunge on its own.

    By feature · Spa

    Pools with a spa

    A spa isn't a separate model — it's a companion built alongside the pool you choose, sharing the same paving, plumbing and equipment. Pick any pool, add a spa as a raised spillover or an in-line unit, and we plumb and wire it during the build so nothing gets retrofitted later.

    Our Kensington and spa project in Booval is the combo in the flesh — an 11m family pool with a spillover spa cascading into it, quoted as one job. For a standalone spa, we stock the Bastia: a compact 3.2m × 2m unit that also serves as a plunge pool on a small block.

    By feature · Edge

    Infinity & drop-edge pools

    An infinity or drop-edge look isn't a pool model — it's what you do with the wall on the downhill side of a sloping block. The pool sits at the high point, and the exposed face drops away as a clean, raised edge, finished with a strip or fully clad. Any of our shells can be set up this way where the ground falls.

    The trick is that the wall is a structural, engineered element, so it's designed and priced with the pool once we have your levels — not guessed at afterwards. It's the single best answer to a backyard that slopes away from the house.

    The edge itself is a landscaping element — see the drop-edge and retaining walls section for real installed rates, and our guide to infinity pools in Australia for the full cost picture.

    By feature · Wade-in

    Wide-step entry, benches & wading

    The nicest way into a pool is to walk down into it, the way you would into a natural swimming hole. Several of our shells are moulded with full-width entry steps — the Hayman, Bedarra and Terazza graduate down across the whole shallow end, so you wade in rather than climb down a ladder.

    For sitting rather than walking in, the round Infinity pools carry a bench seat around the rim, and the shallowest sloped shells like the Serenity start around 1.1m — low enough for toddlers while adults stand. A true splash deck or submerged ledge is built into the surround.

    By depth

    Deep vs shallow: choosing on depth

    Depth decides how a pool feels to use. A deeper pool suits diving, cooler water on a hot day and adult swimming; a shallower one is safer and warmer for kids and easier to heat. Most of our shells slope from a shallow end to a deep end, so you get both in one pool.

    These are the real moulded depths from our specifications — deepest models first. The Amalfi and Kensington both reach a full 2m, while the round Infinity pools hold a level 1.45m end to end.

    ModelLengthShallow endDeep end
    Amalfi9.0m0.90m2.0m
    Kensington11.0m1.0m2.0m
    Sheffield8.0m0.98m1.96m
    Castello7.50m0.98m1.92m
    Oxford7.0m1.0m1.88m
    Grandeur8.25m1.0m1.85m
    Allure5.0m1.10m1.60m
    Verona4.50m1.10m1.50m
    Serenity4.0m1.10m1.47m
    Infinity 33.0m1.45muniform1.45m
    Infinity 44.0m1.45muniform1.45m
    Terrace 33.0m1.45muniform1.45m

    Depths are the moulded shell dimensions from our specifications. Uniform-depth pools hold one depth end to end; the rest slope from a shallow end to a deep end.

    By size

    Browse by size

    Footprint is where most people start, because it's set by the block. We group the range into four size bands — from slimline small pools to full family shells — and each links to the models that fit, with a genuine starting price.

    By colour

    Browse by colour

    Colour changes a pool more than any brochure suggests. Every shell is finished in one of four Crystalite® ColourGuard gelcoats — lighter tones make the water look bigger and brighter, darker ones give a glassy, reflective surface. Choose a finish to see it under real Brisbane light.

    Fibreglass pool design questions, answered

    What shapes do fibreglass pools come in?

    Fibreglass pools are moulded shells, so the shape is set at the factory. Our range covers three: rectangles with softened, radiused corners (the bulk of the models, from 5m to 11m), a round range (the Terrace 3, Infinity 3 and Infinity 4), and five T-shaped pools (the Bellino, Imperial, Castello, Grandeur and Amalfi). A true freeform or kidney shape is a concrete build, not fibreglass.

    Do you make round fibreglass pools?

    Yes — three of them. The Terrace 3 is a 3m round plunge with a flat, uniform 1.45m floor. The Infinity 3 (3m) and Infinity 4 (4m) are round plunges with a bench seat set into the rim to sit and wade on. Aqua Technics builds these as Australia's only design-certified round fibreglass shells, so they clear engineering and certification the same way our rectangular pools do.

    Do you make T-shaped fibreglass pools?

    Yes. The Imperial (7m) and Amalfi (9m) are moulded T-shaped shells — the crossbar gives a wider section for lounging and play alongside a deeper swimming leg. They're the two T-shapes in the range; every other model is a rectangle or a round pool.

    Can I add a spa to a fibreglass pool?

    Yes — a spa sits alongside any of our pools as a raised or in-line combo, plumbed and wired during the build rather than bolted on later. Our Kensington and spa project in Booval pairs an 11m family pool with a spillover spa, quoted as one figure. We also stock the Bastia, a compact 3.2m × 2m spa that doubles as a plunge pool on its own. Book a site visit and we'll price the combination that fits your block.

    Which fibreglass pool is best for swimming laps?

    The longer, narrower shells swim best. The Bellagio (7.5m × 2.5m) is the one true narrow corridor for a tight side yard; step up to the Sheffield (8m), Elysian (8.3m) or Kensington (11m) for a full lane with a deep end. Fibreglass doesn't do a 25m lap pool — those are the models that give the most unbroken length.

    How deep do your fibreglass pools go?

    The deepest shells reach 2.0m at the deep end — the Amalfi and Kensington both hit a full 2m, deep enough for diving, with the Sheffield close behind at 1.96m. At the other end, the round pools hold a level 1.45m and the compact plunges sit around 1.1m to 1.5m, which suits wading, kids and cooling off. Every model's shallow and deep figures are in the depth table above.

    Found a design that fits your yard?

    Book a free site visit — we'll measure your block, confirm which shapes and sizes fit, and quote the pool, surround and any spa as one all-inclusive figure.

    Mon-Fri 8am-5pm, Sat 9am-1pm