Pool Upgrades & Renovations in Orange Park, FL
Orange Park pool work for Tivey is upgrade-only — resurfacing, equipment modernization, deck refresh, screen enclosure rebuild on the 1980s–90s pools that need their 25-year refresh. Mark's RP252555575 license covers the work. Clay County permitting in-house.
Built to Orange Park standards.
Orange Park sits in the same Clay County corridor as Mark's home base of Fleming Island. The town's lower owner-occupancy rate (55.6%) makes it a real market for landlord-investor renovations alongside owner-occupied remodels. Mark's design-build process — one contract, one number to call — keeps both project types on schedule and on budget.
I'm a FL-licensed pool/spa contractor (RP252555575), and I work on the pool you already own. Equipment, plaster, tile, decks, screens, lighting, automation, plumbing, repairs — anything that makes the pool you have feel like the pool you wanted. I do not build new pools from the ground up. If you have one, I can modernize it, fix it, refresh it, or rebuild every visible surface and every piece of equipment around it. Most projects come down to two questions: what's leaking money in your monthly bill (usually a single-speed pump and an inefficient heater), and what's stopping you from using the pool more (usually a tired finish, a torn screen, or lights that died). I solve both with the same crew that handles your kitchen and bath.
Pool Upgrades & Renovations options for Orange Park homeowners.
- Pool ResurfacingWhen the plaster gets rough underfoot, the color has gone gray, or you're seeing the substrate come through — that's a resurface. I strip the old finish, fix any underlying cracks or hollow spots, and apply your new finish (smooth plaster, pebble aggregate, or quartz). The color and texture choice is bigger than people realize: it sets the entire look of the water for the next 8–12 years.
- Deck + Coping RefreshThe deck and coping are 70% of what your eye sees when you walk out the back door. A tired, stained, or cracked deck makes a fine pool look neglected. I refurbish or replace pool decks in concrete, pavers, or travertine — including the coping that frames the water's edge.
- Equipment + AutomationVariable-speed pumps, modern heaters or heat pumps, salt systems, automation packages, smart-home integration, LED lighting. The mechanical side of your pool is where the monthly cost lives — and where the comfort upgrades live.
- Screen Enclosure Repair + RebuildFlorida pool screens take a beating — UV, hurricanes, lightning, kids. I repair, rescreen, or rebuild the entire enclosure depending on what you've got. Aluminum framing, hurricane-rated where the wind code requires it.
The local-knowledge details I won't skip.
Variable-speed pump retrofit. Florida-mandated for pumps over 1HP since 2010; many older Orange Park pools still run single-speed equipment.
Plaster-to-pebble upgrade. Doubles finish lifespan; resurfacing is the right time.
Screen enclosure replacement. Older enclosures often don't meet current Clay County 130 mph wind-load.
Pool deck settlement. Some older Orange Park subdivisions have seen pool deck heave; resurfacing without addressing the cause is a short-term fix.
Equipment pad upgrade for modern automation. Adding salt cells, automation, or heat pumps requires the pad to support the new equipment count.
Permits pulled in-house, every job.
Clay County permits are pulled through Tyler Technologies EPL. Permit fee is $1 per $1,000 of construction cost plus a $50 application fee. Jobs over $5,000 require a recorded Notice of Commencement before the first inspection — Tivey handles the filing.
The questions Orange Park homeowners ask first.
Do you build new pools from scratch?
No. I work on existing pools only — upgrades, renovations, equipment, decks, screens, automation, repairs. If you don't have a pool yet and want one built ground-up, I'll happily refer you to a pool builder I trust and then come in afterward to handle the deck, screen enclosure, outdoor kitchen, or other adjacent work that connects the pool to the rest of your home.
What kinds of pool work do you actually do?
Anything on a pool that already exists. The most common projects: plaster or pebble resurfacing, tile and coping replacement, deck refurbishment or full re-pour, screen enclosure repair or rebuild, pump and filter equipment swaps (variable-speed retrofits in particular), heater install or replacement, salt-water conversion, LED light upgrades, pool automation and smart-home integration, plumbing repairs, crack repair, spillover spa retrofits where the structure allows, and feature additions like fire bowls or waterfalls.
What's the typical cost range?
Three rough tiers from real Northeast Florida projects. Refresh ($5K–$15K): single-equipment swap (a heater, a pump, a salt system) or a basic resurface. Standard ($15K–$40K): full plaster refinish + deck refurbishment + a couple of equipment upgrades. Premium ($40K–$90K): full reno — resurface, tile, coping, new deck, full automation package, and a screen enclosure rebuild. The 90-second estimator on my home page narrows it tighter.
How long does a pool renovation take?
Equipment swaps are usually a one-day job. A plaster resurface is 2–3 weeks because the cure has to be respected. A full premium reno (resurface + deck + screen + automation) runs 6–10 weeks depending on the deck choice and screen complexity. I sequence the noisy work first so you're not living next to a vibrating saw on weekends.
Pool Upgrades & Renovations across Northeast Florida.
See your range in 90 seconds.
Tell me about your pool upgrades & renovations project — you'll see a real budget range mid-flow, and I'll call within 24 hours with a specific quote for Orange Park and the Clay County permit nuances.