Four decades of pools. A selection from the last two years.
Residential builds, commercial equipment-room rebuilds, spa and hot-tub circuits, and a lot of lighting work. Ask us for references if you’re weighing a similar job.

Inground pool electrical — subpanel, equipotential bonding grid, and GFCI protection.

Equipment pad — pump, heater, and lighting wired together to NEC 680.

New-build pool wiring with full GFCI protection, permitted and inspected.

Built-in spa integrated with the pool — dedicated circuit, GFCI disconnect, and bonding.

LED niche lighting with deck-perimeter low-voltage landscape lighting.

Commercial pool equipment-room wiring — feeder, pump controls, and bonding.

Underwater and landscape lighting integrated with the pool's automation.

Bonding retrofit bringing an older pool up to current NEC 680.

Residential inground pool — heater circuit and pump wiring.

Residential pool new-build electrical scope.

Feature inground pool project — full electrical scope including pump, heater, lighting, and bonding.

Inground pool — equipment pad wired through one disconnect.

Pool electrical with GFCI protection and NEC 680 bonding.

Pool perimeter and underwater lighting integrated with automation.

Landscape lighting controlled with low-voltage transformer.

Pool with integrated spa — dedicated circuit and bonding verified.

Multi-feature inground pool — wired through panel upgrade.

Equipment pad rebuild — pump, heater, automation, all to code.

Integrated landscape and pool lighting — single control system.

Full electrical scope from panel to pool equipment.

Inground pool electrical — bonding grid, panel, lighting.
Considering a job? Contact us and we can share references from comparable jobs.
From site survey to inspection-signed.
The five-step process we follow on every inground pool electrical project — bonding, pre-pour conduit, equipment pad, lighting, and final commissioning.

Before — site survey and pre-pour planning

Step 1 — Pool excavation and form work

Step 2 — Bonding grid installation

Step 3 — Pre-pour electrical and conduit

Step 4 — Equipment pad and pump wiring

Step 5 — Final commissioning and inspection

Finished — pool ready for use

Long after — clean, code-compliant work
Pick up the phone. That’s how this works.
Estimates are free. Paul usually answers, and if he can’t, he calls back the same day. We book one to three weeks out for residential work; commercial timelines vary.
(860) 827-8504