



This one is a bigger scope job, and we love it. We're putting in a full paver surround for a multi-pool complex, and the install is coming together exactly how it should - clean lines, tight joints, and a layout that works with the space rather than against it.
The pavers themselves are laid in a herringbone pattern, which is one of the strongest patterns you can use for high-traffic areas. It locks the pavers together so they resist shifting over time. That's not just a style choice - it's a structural one. Around a pool where foot traffic is constant, that kind of stability matters.
One thing worth pointing out is the dark border detail running along the perimeter and around the pool edges. That border does two things: it gives the surface a finished, intentional look, and it helps define the edge where the pavers meet the pool coping. Details like that separate a solid paver install from a great one.
We're working with a large footprint here - multiple pool basins, a big open deck area, and a building on each side to work around. Getting everything to line up and flow correctly on a site this size takes real planning before the first paver ever goes down. The result is a surface that looks cohesive from every angle.
Pavers are one of the best investments you can make for any outdoor space. They handle the weather, they hold up to heavy use, and when one ever needs to be replaced, you don't have to tear up the whole surface. For a complex like this one, that durability is everything.