Stainless Steel Lounger Chaise is a simple stainless lounger for resting by the pool or in shallow water. No jets, no air system, no electrics — just a shaped metal frame that lets a person lie back and switch off for a while.
The frame is welded from stainless tubing in either AISI 304 or AISI 316. One piece is roughly 2005 mm long, 780 mm wide and 608 mm high, with a mass around 64 kg. It stands solidly on deck or in a shallow zone, but two people can still move it if the layout changes.
You see these loungers around hotel pools, in spa relaxation rooms, on terraces of wellness centres and sometimes right in the water where depth and design allow. AISI 304 usually goes to standard chlorinated pools away from the coast. AISI 316 is the go‑to when saltwater, high minerals or sea climate are part of the story.
The design is bare metal, no upholstery. That keeps maintenance low and avoids the whole “wet cushions” problem. Rated load is about 120 kg for one user; beyond that you are outside the nominal design range.
FAQ — Stainless Steel Lounger Chaise
For a normal indoor chlorinated pool not near the sea, 304 is usually fine. If the installation is coastal, uses saltwater or has strong mineral content, 316 withstands that better and is the safer bet.
Yes, provided the pool structure and water depth make sense for it. Some projects park these loungers in shallow bays so users sit half in the water. Just plan with the 608 mm height and your actual water level, so posture is comfortable.
The standard size covers most cases. If a project needs specific anchoring, special feet or some detail changed, we can look at it. Large shape changes are possible only after an engineer checks that stability and strength remain acceptable.
Mostly regular cleaning together with the pool area: rinse, mild detergent if needed, no aggressive acids or hard abrasives. There are no moving parts or consumables, so there is nothing “scheduled” to replace.
Same story as with the other models: no single price tag. The steel grade, quantity, country and any project‑specific changes all influence the number. Price is calculated per enquiry, not taken from a global table.









