Tubular Aero Massage Lounger uses the same air‑bubble idea as the chair version, but the build is more open and technical. You see the frame and piping instead of a closed shell. Air runs through an 80 mm PN‑10 PVC line and comes out along the lounger so the user lies on a strip of bubbles, not directly on steel.
Because the pipe is smaller and the blower is lighter, the massage feels softer. Less “dense” than the 90 mm / 150 m³/h model, which some people actually prefer in thermal or mineral pools where they just want to relax. No drama here — both are bubble loungers, this one is just the calmer one.
The frame and exposed parts are AISI 316 stainless. This combo is normal for pool and spa kit that has to live in chlorinated or mineral water for years, provided the water is kept in check. The open design makes it easy to see if something is happening with the pipes: scale, deposits, loose fittings – all visible at a glance.
Most clients use Tubular Aero Massage Lounger in hotel and municipal pools, thermal centres and spa areas with several loungers in one zone. It also turns up in private projects where the “machinery look” does not scare the designer. It is a one‑person unit; anything above roughly 120 kg per user is out of spec.
FAQ — Tubular Aero Massage Lounger
There is a base spec (AISI 316, 80 mm pipe, 120 m³/h blower), but in reality we look at each pool plan. Fixing points, route of the air line and some small geometry details are usually tuned to the project, not taken blind from a catalogue.
Minor changes are realistic — things like length tweaks or how the frame sits on the floor or steps. Full redesign of the shape is another story: the frame still has to carry the load and keep bubble distribution even, so any “big idea” goes through engineering first.
Mostly in public and hotel pools, thermal and mineral baths, spa areas with more than one lounger in a row. Private projects happen too, especially when the client wants something robust and does not mind seeing pipes and structure.
Nothing exotic. Keep pool chemistry under control and look at the piping from time to time. If you see scale or anything odd on the line, you can plan cleaning before it becomes a restriction. That’s the whole point of the open frame.
Price is “on request”. It depends on how many units are needed, where they go, what has to be adapted and what the logistics look like. Without project info, the figure would be simply fiction, so we always calculate it based on a specific request.











