Robert did work for me in 2018. Every time we use the pool I regret that. I thought I'd picked a good one... I really did. This is the first time I've ever had an issue with a contractor, and it was a doozy. I don't Yelp often, but you can check out my other reviews and see that I'm usually singing the praises of talented, honest people. I should have paid attention to the red flags early on (my spouse tried to steer me to safety, but I was stubborn). Robert talks a good game -- he reminded me of my dad, and I genuinely trusted him. Everything might have been fine if there hadn't been mistakes. The work that was done according to the contract is fine. I don't even mind honest mistakes as long as they're dealt with, but that's not how CPR operated. Sub-contractors handled nearly everything; the one day Robert actually came to the house, he made a mistake and refused to admit it. (Five bones says he replies to this review and repeats his excuse for the umpteenth time: he pestered my spouse to make a new decision on the spot, instead of following the contract with MY name on it.) Our final contract was clear, but he claims it wasn't -- he either didn't read it or brought a draft (unapproved) contract with him that day. There's now a dark circle in the bottom of our pool, because Robert installed a "fake drain" instead of plastering the bottom smooth. The contract stated to plaster over the old drain -- a decision I agonized over and finally made during a 30-minute conversation with Jan. The pool bottom was retroactively plastered over, but looks awful. Small claims court agreed he screwed up... but that's little consolation, as my costs to fix his mistake (which is unfixable, in reality) have far exceeded the settlement. To add insult to injury... Robert said start-up would include a guy coming "for 5-6 days, brushing every day, and taking care of the chemicals." $600 extra got us two 10-minute visits and one brushing. On the second visit, the guy swiped my chemicals instead of using his own(!), then left the water unbalanced (zero ppm chlorine... maybe he meant to use our chlorine instead of our muriatic acid?). I texted the subcontractor directly to see what the deal was, and he showed up at our door to apologize... but Robert insisted that nothing was wrong with that service. The sub-contractors that demo'd the plaster uncovered a lot of rebar and actually went down to the dirt in one area. That was disconcerting, as were the rust stains that began showing up in the plaster ~6 months on. A third party ID'd these as rebar stains. Communication was abysmal. Emails would generally be ignored for days to weeks, unless it was time for payment (when we'd receive a few emails and phone calls in one day). Our record wait for a reply was one month, during which we'd finally assumed they didn't want our business anymore. I wish we'd walked away at that point. There are weird personality things with both Robert and Jan. Jan seemed super nice, but gossiped negatively about other customers. And Robert, upon meeting me outside the courtroom, started telling me my spouse had said nasty things about me... really creepy. (Maybe their relationship is bad enough that he thinks that tactic would hurt a marriage? I don't know.) They don't seem like they want to be running a business, and they seem afraid to acknowledge what they say verbally in writing (ie. the start-up debacle described above). I do not know if they are super shifty or simply incompetent. This was the lowest quote we got. I remember being shocked, as Robert seemed so trustworthy... but everything eventually came around to make sense. Still, this was a $14,000+ project that CPR didn't seem to care about doing to the best of their ability. What a bad feeling, as a homeowner. In short, if you expect excellence and integrity, enter into a contract here at your own risk (and after searching the Better Business Bureau, which I failed to do). Maybe you'll get lucky -- as I said, if no mistakes are made, you could get a decent job. If I had it to do again, I'd look elsewhere.