This question cannot be answered without knowing the kind of pool, the associated structures i.e pool house, cabana etc., and the location of the property.
it loses value. value is supply vs demand. many people don't want a pool in their house, you eliminate that group from consideration thereby reducing demand.
It does but not very much. My Friends have a pool and I have a 1/2 acre larger lot and slightly smaller house and my appraises for more then their property with a pool
That depends on where you are and the quality and extent of the work.
Your answer depends on your location. A pool in a Las Vegas building adds a different value -- and expense for upkeep, water and additional insurance, than does a pool in Toronto.
too much ,just buy a house with one
It depends on the size, age and condition of the pool, whether it's enclosed and how much decking is around it. If the pool is NOT in-ground, forget it. An inground pool that cost $20,000 might add about half that to the value of a home, on average.
as big as the white house's swimming pool.
White-Pool House was created in 1887.
Every pool will add value to your house. In ground are little better for sure but shapes doesn't really matter it all depend of what you like also my preference would be the banana shape
pool carpool swimming pool pool house
No, they are not really "part of the pool". A pool apron is the surrounding area outside of the pool. A pool apron may or may not be physically attached or even molded to the same piece of concrete as the pool it serves. But the question you are asking is much akin to "are the stairs in front of a house, part of the house"? Again the answer being, no not really. The house is the house, the stairs are a means to reach the house. Whether those stairs are molded into the concrete foundation or simply free standing wooden steps or bricks leading up to the house is another question entirely. The same goes with pool aprons, there are a wide variety from molded concrete attached directly to the pool or separate aprons made from wood or brick that are simply next to the pool. A pool in its purest form is simply the water and the container that water is in. Thus an apron is an accessory to a pool, attached or not being a separate question. A pool does not even require an apron to be a pool.
No, it doesn't work that way. A pool certainly adds value, but there are no improvements that can be made to a home that are 100% added to the value of the home. I've heard that a kitchen remodel can add about 60% of the cost to the value. My guess is that you would be lucky to add 50% of the cost of the pool to the overall value of the property. Two other things to remember: Some people don't like pools and in their eyes it would decrease the value of the property. You don't want your property to go up by $50k, because your property taxes will go up as well!