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Depuis le 1er janvier 2006, tous les propriétaires de piscines privatives doivent équiper leurs bassins de plein air d'un dispositif de sécurité visant à prévenir le risque de noyade. Au choix :
Barrière.
Couverture de sécurité.
Alarme.
Abri de piscine.Loi 2003-9 (Journal officiel du 4 janvier 2003).
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- Hard cover you can walk on is best, but expensive.
- Alarm is the cheapest and easiest to meet regs, but they can be flaky.
- barrier has to be a certain height and distance irrc. It's s probably the best on balance, but the worst looking and requires drilling holes in the paving to fix the poles. But they're not especially obnoxious.
He should already have one, and is liable if say a kid broke in and had an accident.
If budget is a consideration and you're after safety rather than regs I'd be tempted to get an alarm and barrier. (assuming it can be relatively freely accessed by your daughter)
- Hard cover you can walk on is best, but expensive.
If anyone can point me in the right direction for French domestic swimming pool regulations, that would be super helpful.
My Dad has a pool and we are trying to work out the best way to child proof it, particularly for my sensory seeking autistic daughter, when not in use. I think they have a certain type of pool cover requirement from visiting friends a very long time ago!