Dartmouth woman transforms 1970s speedboat into 'beautiful' backyard pool - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Dartmouth woman transforms 1970s speedboat into 'beautiful' backyard pool

Oliva Kendallcame across a listing for an Mercury model "Runabout" boat from the Chestnut Canoe Company on Facebook Marketplace for $300.

'I thought if it could keep water out, it could probably keep water in,' said Olivia Kendall

A red boat is seen with its cockpit lined with a pool liner and filled with water
Olivia Kendall built a pool out of an old Mercury model runabout from the 1970s made by the former Chestnut Canoe Company. (Dylan Jones/CBC)

One Dartmouth, N.S., woman has decidedthat having water inside a boat doesn't have to be cause for alarm.

After about a month of work, Olivia Kendall says she's completed turning an old motorboat into a backyard pool.

"It looked really beautiful. It was obviously very old," Kendall said of the boat."But I thought if it could keep water out, it could probably keep water in."

Since purchasing her home in 2017, she saidshe's been working on renovating theproperty. She was originally looking intostock tank pools whichuse shallow, galvanized steel tanks that are usually found on farms for livestock for her home, as they've recently become a trendy pool alternative.

She was discouraged, however, by the high costs of the tanks, and cameacross a listing for an old Mercury model "runabout" boat from the Chestnut Canoe Company on Facebook Marketplace for $300.

A page from an old catalog shows three boats, with the Mercury model Runabout seen in the upper right of the image
Olivia Kendall turned an old Mercury model runabout from the Chestnut Canoe Company, seen in the upper right in a catalog, into a pool for her backyard. (Wooden Canoe Museum)

"On a whim, I bought it and the gentleman brought it straight to the backyard and I just started working away at it."

She began telling people about the project to keep herself accountable, she said, and started putting the pool together. The first step was choosinga place for the boat to live in her backyard. Then she levelled the ground beneath it and built a frame to hold the boat steady.

Kendall said she went back to Facebook Marketplace, where she found some second-hand equipment, including a pool pump, sand filter and a salt water chlorinator which creates chlorine gas from salt that is dissolved in the water to start transforming the boat's cockpit into a pool.

Complete with waterfall

"Going the second-hand route allows you to meet interesting people who are knowledgeable [about]those items," she explained, adding that the process was made a lot easier because of the help she got from sellers she purchased equipment from.

Then it was a matter of covering the deck of the boat with a pool liner, drilling into the hull of the boat to feed the pool hoses through and adding a waterfall attachment that funnels the water back into the pool once it's gone through the filters.

Olivia Kendall is seen smiling as her daughter, Adele, sits in the cherry red pool-boat.
Olivia Kendall said her daughter, Adele, has spent much of the summer in the pool since it was completed. (Dylan Jones/CBC News)

Some finishing touches included a bin at the back of the pool, which she uses to store drinks for herself and her three-year-old daughter Adele, who's added her own personal touch to the "reverse boat" with a variety of her toys.

"We just needed somethingsmall enough for her that was safe to splash in. And I needed something that I could relax in as well," Kendall said.

Herdaughterhas spent any time she can in the pool and other kids in the neighbourhood are big fans of the projectas well, she said.

Landscaping and lights

There are still some things to be added to the boat, Kendall said. She plans on landscaping around the hull and adding lights to bring a tropical ambience. She called the pool a "prototype" and plans toteachherself how to build a permanentbase for the boat once the swimming season is over.

She's gotten a quick lesson in everything from chemistry to construction, she said, adding that sherecommends taking the boat route to people who are thinking of adding a pool to their homes, especiallythrough the pre-ownedmarket.

"It forced me to learn how to do things on my own and be resourceful and trick my friends [into] coming over and lifting things for me," Kendall said with a laugh.

A cherry red motorboat with a pool in the cockpit is seen with a white umbrella hanging over it. In front of it, are two red folding chairs.
Olivia Kendall said it took her about a month's worth of work to turn an old motor boat into a functioning pool for her backyard. (Submitted by Olivia Kendall)