Service overview

A clearer view of condition, priority, and timing

State of good repair work helps turn a general sense that the facility is aging into a clearer list of what matters now, what can wait, and what should be budgeted next.

For boards and property teams, that kind of structure makes it easier to talk about repair priorities without losing sight of day-to-day operations.

Scope

What a state of good repair review can cover

The purpose is to give stakeholders a practical view of condition and sequence rather than one long list of unrelated issues.

Condition-focused review of pool and supporting amenity assets

Prioritization of urgent, near-term, and future items

Support for phased renewal conversations and budgeting

Clearer framing of repair versus replacement decisions

Process

How repair planning is organized

The work is most useful when issues are grouped by risk, urgency, and operating impact so the next conversation is easier to have.

1

Review facility condition through an operational lens

2

Group issues by risk, timing, and service impact

3

Connect findings to maintenance and renewal planning

4

Support clearer capital conversations with stakeholders

FAQ

Common questions

What does a state of good repair review look at?

It looks at the condition of the pool and surrounding amenity assets, then organizes issues by urgency, risk, and likely timing so the facility has a clearer roadmap.

Who usually needs this kind of review?

Boards, property managers, owners, and operators often need it when the facility is aging, capital conversations are coming up, or there is uncertainty about what should be handled first.

How does this help with future pool work?

It gives renovation, maintenance, and renewal conversations a clearer structure so future work can be sequenced with more confidence instead of handled as disconnected decisions.

Related services

Related planning and renewal services