Europe’s First Underwater Restaurant Opens in Norway

Europe’s First Underwater Restaurant Opens in Norway
An inside view of the underwater restaurant Under in Baaly in Norway on March 19, 2019. (Lefteris Karagiannopoulos/Reuters)
Reuters
3/21/2019
Updated:
3/21/2019

BALY, Norway—Europe’s first underwater restaurant opened in Norway on March 20 with more than 7,000 customers booked to eat among the fish.

Situated on the southern tip of Norway, the restaurant looks like a large concrete tube partly submerged in the North Sea. It is called Under, which also means “wonder” in Norwegian.

It was designed by Norwegian architecture firm Snoehetta, which also created the Opera house in Oslo and the National September 11 Memorial Museum in New York.

“The fascination is just this movement from above water to underwater through the building ... The big window exposes the underwater, not like an aquarium, it’s the real thing,” Snoehetta’s founder Kjetil Traedal Thorsen told Reuters.

Entering Under initially feels like going into a sauna, as wooden planks cover its upper section, but an eight-meter flight of stairs leads down to a large dining area that sits about 40 guests, walled by a gigantic transparent window to the ocean.

Traedal Thorsen said the construction can cope with very harsh weather and is shaped in such a way that it can withstand what he called “the wave of the century.”

The restaurant is laid out so there are minimal reflections in the glass wall, which fills the room with natural light during the day, filtered by the greenish color of the water.

A full 18-course meal, based on local ingredients and seafood, can cost up to 3,700 crowns ($430) per person including drinks.

“The goal is to get 50 percent of the guests who eat there to spend the night in the hotel as well ... We expect around 12,000 people eating dinner every year,” said Gaute Ubostad, one of two brothers who own the restaurant and a nearby hotel.

There are only a handful of underwater restaurants around the world, mainly found in tropical waters like the Maldives in the Indian Ocean.

By Lefteris Karagiannopoulos
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