You Can Literally Eat Dinner 18 Feet Under the Sea at This Norwegian Restaurant
There’s a restaurant 18 feet below sea level, serving full tasting menus inside a concrete structure anchored to the seabed. Guests enter at ground level and descend into a dining room surrounded by seawater, separated only by thick walls and a panoramic glass window that looks straight into the North Sea. The concept has garnered international recognition and resulted in months-long reservation waitlists.
“Under,” located on Norway’s southern coast, near the village of Båly in the Lindesnes region, seats about 35 to 40 guests each evening. An 11-meter-wide panoramic window frames the water outside, while subtle lighting draws fish and marine life closer after dark. Cod, crabs, dogfish, lobsters, and seals pass through depending on the weather and season. Stormy conditions completely change the view.
Architecture Built for the Ocean
The building was designed by Snøhetta, the Norwegian architecture firm also behind the National September 11 Memorial Museum in New York. “Under’s” concrete shell measures more than 33 meters long and features walls about one meter thick. Engineers designed it to handle extreme coastal conditions, including what the firm describes as the “wave of the century.” The structure also plays a role beyond hospitality. Its exterior acts as an artificial reef. Seaweed, barnacles, limpets, and snails attach themselves to the surface.
Dinner Runs on the Chef’s Terms
The kitchen is operated by Danish chef Nicolai Ellitsgaard Pedersen, who has built the menu around local sourcing and restraint. Strangely, guests do not choose courses; each visit follows a tasting format that typically consists of between 18 and 21 courses, depending on the season and availability.
Dishes have included monkfish cheeks, squat lobster, kelp, limpets, sorrel leaves, stinging nettles, and aged clams. Every menu remains a surprise until service begins.
The full immersion menu currently costs approximately 2,450 Norwegian kroner, equivalent to around $255. Wine pairings add another level of detail, with options ranging from $170 to $310. Diners are encouraged to block off more than three hours for the meal.
A Working Lab Disguised as a Dining Room

Image via Wikimedia Commons/City Foodsters
“Under” also functions as a marine research facility. The Norwegian government provides funding for scientific work conducted onsite, and researchers collaborate with nearby Agder University. Students and scientists study local biodiversity, cold-water ecosystems, and marine behavior using the restaurant’s unique vantage point.
The restaurant includes monitoring equipment and cameras that collect long-term data. Plans have also included livestreams of the underwater view, which allows remote visitors to participate in citizen science projects by spotting unusual species. These images are to help train machine learning systems to identify marine life more accurately.
Why People Keep Booking It Anyway
Getting to “Under” requires commitment. The nearest major airport is located more than an hour away by car, and reservations often sell out months in advance. Despite the logistics and the price, demand remains steady because recognition has helped. Time magazine named “Under” one of the world’s greatest places shortly after it opened to the public.