Sun. Jul 7th, 2024

A scientist is spending 100 days in an underwater hotel 22-feet deep in a Florida lagoon — see inside the structure<!-- wp:html --><p>Joe Dituri in the Jules' Undersea Lodge's underwater habitat.</p> <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Thane Milhoan/ MarineLab</p> <p>Joe Dituri is spending is living underwater to research prolonged compression on the human body. <br /> Jules' Undersea Lodge is an underwater habitat located 22-feet deep in a Florida lagoon. <br /> Created for research purposes, the lodge is also a bed & breakfast, starting at $1,125 per night. </p> <div> <div class="slide">Joe Dituri is a biomedical engineer and a retired saturation diver for the US Navy. On 1 March, he grabbed his wetsuit and scuba tanks and dove 22 feet deep into a lagoon in Key Largo to reach the Jules' Undersea Lodge underwater habitat.Joe Dituri gives a high five through the glass to all the divers who swim down to the lodge to greet him. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Thane Milhoan/MarineLab</p> </div> <div class="slide">The Jules' Undersea Lodge is accessible through a 'moon pool.' Dituri will live in the lodge until 9 June, for 100 days total, breaking the world record for the longest time anyone has spent underwater in a fixed environment — currently set at 73 days.Joe Dituri and Jason Sonners, a certified hyperbaric practitioner, access the lodge through its moon pool. Dituri will host many visiting scientists during his stay at the lodge. <p class="copyright">Thane Milhoan/MarineLab</p> <p>Joe Dituri and Jason Sonners, a certified hyperbaric practitioner, access the lodge through its moon pool. Dituri will host many visiting scientists during his stay at the lodge.</p> </div> <div class="slide">Jules' Undersea Lodge is a 20-foot wide and 50-foot long barge that was originally built for research purposes and located 300 feet deep on the edge of the continental shelf, off the coast of Puerto Rico."You get down there and you hear the roar of the air going out," Ian Koblick, founder of Jules' Undersea Lodge, told Insider. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Joe Dituri</p> <p>"You get down there and you hear the roar of the air going out," Ian Koblick, founder of Jules' Undersea Lodge, told Insider.</p> <p>Source: <a href="https://www.mrdf.org/project-neptune">Project NEPTUNE 100. </a></p> </div> <div class="slide">In 1985, after being towed from Puerto Rico to Florida, divers Ian Koblick and Neil Monney turned the habitat into an underwater bed & breakfast and research space. The lodge is named after Jules Verne, writer of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas.Thane Milhoan, habitat operations manager at Jules' Undersea Lodge, photographed from outside the habitat. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Thane Milhoan/MarineLab</p> <p><a href="https://jul.com/">Jules' Undersea Lodge. </a></p> </div> <div class="slide">Guests can spend the night for $1,125 per single occupancy, or $ 1,687 per couple.Spending the night at the lodge is popular among sports divers, who come to get married, or to celebrate anniversaries. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Thane Milhoan/MarineLab</p> </div> <div class="slide">'It's not a five-star hotel by any wild stretch of the imagination," Dituri told Insider. "It is bare and meager living quarters for scientists. It's for people who are looking for a zest for life."The Jules' Undersea Lodge hosts educational field trips for kids through its MarineLab program. The lodge is equipped with wifi, and a television. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Thane Milhoan/MarineLab</p> <p>The Jules' Undersea Lodge hosts educational field trips for kids through its MarineLab program. The lodge is equipped with WiFi and a television.</p> </div> <div class="slide">The lodge is equipped with all the things you can find in a regular, over-the-surface apartment, including a television, WiFi, fridge, and kitchen.Food is transported to the lodge in sealed, pressure-proof containers. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Joe Dituri</p> <p>Food is transported to the lodge in sealed, pressure-proof containers.</p> </div> <div class="slide">A pizza delivery dinner is included in the one-night fee. "Sometimes it comes up a little wet," Dituri said. "But it's the story of living underwater."Thane Milhoan, the habitat operations manager, delivers pizza to the Jules' Undersea Lodge. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Thane Milhoan/MarineLab</p> </div> <div class="slide">Aside from breaking a world record, Dituri has two goals for his project NEPTUNE 100: raising awareness of marine research and conservation, and studying the effects of prolonged compression on the bodyMicrobial ecologist Hunter Hines with Joe Dituri. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Joe Dituri</p> </div> <div class="slide">The pressure inside the lodge is approximately 10 pounds per square inch more than on the surface. The increase in pressure can crush an empty jar, or squish an overly ripe banana.Plastic jar crushed by the pressure. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Joe Dituri</p> <p>Dituri showcases how bananas get squished by the pressure in an Instagram <a href="https://www.instagram.com/reel/CpdO_t3gQUs/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading">video</a>. </p> </div> <div class="slide">Because of the prolonged compression, Dituri himself anticipates shrinking about one inch in the 100 days he's underwater. The inch will come back over time once he resurfaces. "I mean, I'm six one, I really don't care," he told Insider.Dituri photographed with an Explorer's Club flag. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Joe Dituri</p> <p>Dituri is the chairman of the Florida chapter of the Explorers Club, and he brought one of the club's flags inside the habitat with him. The Explorers Club only has 222 flags, which it gives to its members when they go on expeditions that are anticipated to bring scientific results. Once the expedition ends, the flag has to be returned to the club.</p> </div> <div class="slide">The scientist's anticipated shrinking is the exact opposite of what happens to astronauts, who grow in space. And the confined, isolated environment is analogous to a space flight.Joe Dituri in the lodge at night. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Joe Dituri</p> </div> <div class="slide">"The lodge has never generated a single dollar of profit in 30 years," founder Ian Koblick told Insider. "Why do I keep it going? Because it's the only place in the world where you can take people as close to going to space as you can get on this earth."Scientist Harrison Albert observes an angelfish from inside Jules' Undersea Lodge. <p class="copyright">Thane Milhoan/MarineLab</p> </div> <div class="slide">Plus, Koblick says educating kids about marine conservation is key. He calls the kids that come and visit the lodge "marine conservation warriors." "If we could get more people to experience these kinds of things, we would have more people out trying to support saving our ocean," he told Insider.Young students access the lodge through the moon pool. <p class="copyright">Jules Undersea Lodge</p> </div> <div class="slide">At the end of his 100 days, Dituri will emerge from the lodge and gradually make his way up, swimming around the lagoon. "I can tell you when I resurface that I'm going to go see the sunset because that's the one thing I miss the most," he told Insider.Joe Dituri takes a selfie with a diver. <p class="copyright">Courtesy of Joe Dituri</p> </div> </div> <div class="read-original">Read the original article on <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/marine-scientist-record-ocean-diver-underwater-hotel-jules-lodge-sea-2023-3">Business Insider</a></div><!-- /wp:html -->

Joe Dituri in the Jules’ Undersea Lodge’s underwater habitat.

Joe Dituri is spending is living underwater to research prolonged compression on the human body. 
Jules’ Undersea Lodge is an underwater habitat located 22-feet deep in a Florida lagoon. 
Created for research purposes, the lodge is also a bed & breakfast, starting at $1,125 per night. 

Joe Dituri is a biomedical engineer and a retired saturation diver for the US Navy. On 1 March, he grabbed his wetsuit and scuba tanks and dove 22 feet deep into a lagoon in Key Largo to reach the Jules’ Undersea Lodge underwater habitat.Joe Dituri gives a high five through the glass to all the divers who swim down to the lodge to greet him.
The Jules’ Undersea Lodge is accessible through a ‘moon pool.’ Dituri will live in the lodge until 9 June, for 100 days total, breaking the world record for the longest time anyone has spent underwater in a fixed environment — currently set at 73 days.Joe Dituri and Jason Sonners, a certified hyperbaric practitioner, access the lodge through its moon pool. Dituri will host many visiting scientists during his stay at the lodge.

Joe Dituri and Jason Sonners, a certified hyperbaric practitioner, access the lodge through its moon pool. Dituri will host many visiting scientists during his stay at the lodge.

Jules’ Undersea Lodge is a 20-foot wide and 50-foot long barge that was originally built for research purposes and located 300 feet deep on the edge of the continental shelf, off the coast of Puerto Rico.”You get down there and you hear the roar of the air going out,” Ian Koblick, founder of Jules’ Undersea Lodge, told Insider.

“You get down there and you hear the roar of the air going out,” Ian Koblick, founder of Jules’ Undersea Lodge, told Insider.

Source: Project NEPTUNE 100. 

In 1985, after being towed from Puerto Rico to Florida, divers Ian Koblick and Neil Monney turned the habitat into an underwater bed & breakfast and research space. The lodge is named after Jules Verne, writer of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas.Thane Milhoan, habitat operations manager at Jules’ Undersea Lodge, photographed from outside the habitat.

Jules’ Undersea Lodge. 

Guests can spend the night for $1,125 per single occupancy, or $ 1,687 per couple.Spending the night at the lodge is popular among sports divers, who come to get married, or to celebrate anniversaries.
‘It’s not a five-star hotel by any wild stretch of the imagination,” Dituri told Insider. “It is bare and meager living quarters for scientists. It’s for people who are looking for a zest for life.”The Jules’ Undersea Lodge hosts educational field trips for kids through its MarineLab program. The lodge is equipped with wifi, and a television.

The Jules’ Undersea Lodge hosts educational field trips for kids through its MarineLab program. The lodge is equipped with WiFi and a television.

The lodge is equipped with all the things you can find in a regular, over-the-surface apartment, including a television, WiFi, fridge, and kitchen.Food is transported to the lodge in sealed, pressure-proof containers.

Food is transported to the lodge in sealed, pressure-proof containers.

A pizza delivery dinner is included in the one-night fee. “Sometimes it comes up a little wet,” Dituri said. “But it’s the story of living underwater.”Thane Milhoan, the habitat operations manager, delivers pizza to the Jules’ Undersea Lodge.
Aside from breaking a world record, Dituri has two goals for his project NEPTUNE 100: raising awareness of marine research and conservation, and studying the effects of prolonged compression on the bodyMicrobial ecologist Hunter Hines with Joe Dituri.
The pressure inside the lodge is approximately 10 pounds per square inch more than on the surface. The increase in pressure can crush an empty jar, or squish an overly ripe banana.Plastic jar crushed by the pressure.

Dituri showcases how bananas get squished by the pressure in an Instagram video

Because of the prolonged compression, Dituri himself anticipates shrinking about one inch in the 100 days he’s underwater. The inch will come back over time once he resurfaces. “I mean, I’m six one, I really don’t care,” he told Insider.Dituri photographed with an Explorer’s Club flag.

Dituri is the chairman of the Florida chapter of the Explorers Club, and he brought one of the club’s flags inside the habitat with him. The Explorers Club only has 222 flags, which it gives to its members when they go on expeditions that are anticipated to bring scientific results. Once the expedition ends, the flag has to be returned to the club.

The scientist’s anticipated shrinking is the exact opposite of what happens to astronauts, who grow in space. And the confined, isolated environment is analogous to a space flight.Joe Dituri in the lodge at night.
“The lodge has never generated a single dollar of profit in 30 years,” founder Ian Koblick told Insider. “Why do I keep it going? Because it’s the only place in the world where you can take people as close to going to space as you can get on this earth.”Scientist Harrison Albert observes an angelfish from inside Jules’ Undersea Lodge.
Plus, Koblick says educating kids about marine conservation is key. He calls the kids that come and visit the lodge “marine conservation warriors.” “If we could get more people to experience these kinds of things, we would have more people out trying to support saving our ocean,” he told Insider.Young students access the lodge through the moon pool.
At the end of his 100 days, Dituri will emerge from the lodge and gradually make his way up, swimming around the lagoon. “I can tell you when I resurface that I’m going to go see the sunset because that’s the one thing I miss the most,” he told Insider.Joe Dituri takes a selfie with a diver.
Read the original article on Business Insider

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