About to emerge: One of the world’s most advanced laboratories
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About to emerge: One of the world’s most advanced laboratories

15/04/2026 SINTEF

Concrete has never had to meet such high standards. Deviations cannot exceed millimetre level. Even the curvature of the Earth must be taken into account in building the world’s most advanced laboratories.

By Henriette Louise Krogness - Published 15.04.2026

It was no easy task for Statsbygg when the Norwegian Ocean Technology Centre was given the go-ahead to put shovels in the ground at Tyholt in Trondheim, Norway. Statsbygg oversees the Norwegian government’s building and property development affairs.

“I have never had a more challenging task in my entire career,” says Statsbygg project director Arild Mathisen.

“That’s because nothing like this has ever been built in Norway, or anywhere else in the world,” he says.

Construction pit

The huge construction pit will house two state-of-the-art test basins. Vegar Johansen, CEO of SINTEF Ocean, says that customers who want to be first in line when everything is ready have already submitted requests. The need is still great for testing outside of computers.

“There’s simply a lot that cannot be simulated or calculated, even with advanced computer programs. It’s when we combine simulations and physical tests that we can see what may need to be changed and adjusted,” says Johansen.

Testing ship models, a cage or offshore wind turbines in the basins can be conducted under realistic conditions.

“The tests provide us with reliable and absolutely necessary data for how the structure would handle conditions at sea,” says Johansen.

But it is no small task to build what is being described as “beyond state of the art”. It’s a little like taking a construction kit home, but the pieces aren’t finished and there are no instructions. What do you do then?

Grey hair and sky-high requirements

When SINTEF Ocean set up the specification requirements for the wave and current facility in the Ocean Basin, they found that what they needed did not exist.

“We had to connect experienced engineers in the construction industry with specialists and researchers at NTNU and SINTEF to find a solution,” Johansen says.

And that challenge is precisely what has given Statsbygg project director Mathisen his grey hairs. The requirements for accuracy and quality at all levels are rigorous, but also absolutely necessary for the basins to carry out the tests they are built to perform.

“We have to get this right. It’s what will set the Norwegian Ocean Technology Centre apart from all other facilities,” says Mathisen.

The currents and measuring equipment are the “beyond state of the art” factors that impact the basin’s wave quality the most. They require very specialized components. Shavings and loose pieces of steel in the pool are a no-go for the advanced flow system. That is why Nordic Steel has prefabricated 2500 components in stainless steel – almost like a giant Lego Technic set to be assembled. Fortunately with instructions this time.

“Everything has to be screwed and bolted into place. The concrete work, the rails and the fastening plates have to be accurate to the millimetre,” says Dariusz Fathi, research director for Ships and Ocean Structures at SINTEF Ocean.

Extreme conditions and unmatched concrete

The flow system will be powered by approximately 90 pumps that push water, equivalent to 2.5 times the amount of the river water in the Nidelva, around the ocean basin. This is necessary when future structures are required to be tested with both waves and currents. Water volumes on this scale are sometimes necessary in order to recreate extreme environmental conditions.

“With the wave and flow system here, we’ll be able to create complex wave systems that are more similar to real conditions. We’ll have the world’s most advanced ocean laboratories with all the options to simulating reality on a model scale,” says a smiling Fathi.

Neither Fathi nor Johansen knows of any other laboratories that are able to test ships and structures in realistic sea conditions, in terms of their seaworthiness, manoeuvrability and energy efficiency.

The concrete that is being used is not an off-the-shelf item either. It needs to be membrane-free and 100 percent waterproof. In addition, it has to withstand extreme forces from waves. NTNU and SINTEF’s concrete experts have worked closely with the contractor firm HENT (Construction and Engineering). The result is a type of concrete that has not been used anywhere else.

Blue whales, Earth’s curvature and millimetre precision

The seakeeping basin is 180 metres long. That is equivalent to a Hurtigruten cruise ship and an Olympic swimming pool. When the model boats are to be tested there, a special vehicle weighing just under 200 tonnes is driven on rails along the entire basin. That is about the weight of the world’s largest animal, the blue whale. Or four railway cars if you like.

This special vehicle makes it possible to test fast-moving vessels in all conceivable wave directions at up to 80 knots. That is almost 150 km/h.

For the tests to be good enough, there is no room for deviation. The tests must be able to be repeated several times under exactly the same conditions. So absolutely no external reasons can move even a millimetre. The support systems in the roof and walls are pure engineering art.

Large amounts of extra reinforcement have also been used in the concrete to strengthen the building. However, all of this is not quite enough. The curvature of the Earth must also be taken into account in the calculation. The special vehicle must follow the Earth’s radius, which in this basin is between six and seven millimetres.

Since 1939, the research community at Tyholt has been involved in developing most of the components in ships and floating structures. Almost all the oil platforms on the Norwegian continental shelf have been tested in the Ocean Basin. This has given Norway a unique position and created enormous income for the state and the business community.

“The research community in Trondheim has always worked closely with the marine industries, and together we have contributed to our companies being at the forefront of technology. This has provided Norway with large revenues for the oil fund, created jobs in rural areas and ensured Norwegian competitiveness globally,” says Johansen.

With the new centre, Johansen expects he will be able to continue to contribute to the nation’s revenues and maintain the social welfare state.

An eldorado for students and researchers

The students will have their own house in the new centre with their own laboratories where theory can be put into in practice.

“We educate candidates for the entire maritime industry and have many research projects where these laboratories will be useful,” says Sverre Steen, a professor and head of the Department of Marine Technology at NTNU.

The students’ playground will be called Archimedes’ House. It will be located under the same roof as the ocean basins and the office and teaching building that are already completed. The teaching building has received BREEAM Outstanding rating, the highest international certification for sustainable buildings.

The proximity between students, researchers and world-class laboratories means that students become part of the research and can contribute ideas and development proposals. The goal is for the building to facilitate interaction between people, machines and the environment. They will not just be traditional laboratories.

“Physically observing what is learned theoretically is worth gold for today’s students. Many of them do not have practical experience in shipping or industry,” says Steen.

The students will take what they learn here with them into the workplace. And they do not need to go abroad to be at the forefront. Now foreign researchers will come here instead.

A green future

Customers at the ocean basins test ships, cages, offshore wind structures, floating solar panels and other floating structures. They are tested to check that the design is safe and can withstand increasingly demanding conditions at sea – before investing in construction.

“When Norwegian marine industries are expected to develop more profitable and sustainable solutions, it matters whether the construction is tested in Trondheim or abroad. Increased competence and knowledge in Norway is an investment for all of us. The investment here contributes to jobs and has ripple effects along the entire coast,” says Johansen.

The founders of the Ship Model Tank were extremely far-sighted when they planned and built the Towing Tank, which was completed already in 1939.

“The fact that world-leading research is still being carried out in the same basin in 2026 is simply incredible,” says Johansen.

However, this 87-year-old landmark is starting to get tired. Soon younger forces will take over.

Facts about the Norwegian Ocean Technology Centre

The Norwegian Ocean Technology Centre will be one of the world's most advanced facilities for research and education in marine technology. The Centre's main location is in Trondheim with wet and dry laboratories, a workshop, teaching rooms, and office and meeting rooms. In addition, infrastructure is being further developed in the Trondheim Fjord, Ålesund and off the islands Hitra and Frøya. The Centre will contribute to the development and the restructuring of the marine industries nationally and globally.

The Norwegian Ocean Technology Centre will offer a number of different laboratories, equipment, expertise and other resources. The research will be available to the public, with the exception of business-critical and confidential assignments.

  • NTNU (owner and user) and SINTEF Ocean (operator and user).
  • Approximately 300 employees and 500 students will carry out their daily activities here.
  • Total area: Approx. 45 000 m²
  • Cost budget: NOK 11.4 billion
  • Client: Statsbygg
  • Completion: Basin buildings in 2029 and the rest of the project in 2030
Fichiers joints
  • The approximately 300-metre-long hole at Tyholt in Trondheim is big enough to accommodate the London Eye, Oslo Plaza and the Arc de Triomphe in Paris – one next to the other. Photo: Statsbygg
  • The new ocean basin will be 60 metres long by 50 metres wide. The depth can be adjusted from zero to twelve metres. A smaller part of the basin is 30 metres deep. Illustration: LINK Architecture.
  • Today’s laboratories will remain in use until the new building is completed. Then the ocean basin will be converted into Archimedes’ House. Photo: SINTEF
  • The new seakeeping basin will be 180 metres long, 40 metres wide and six metres deep. Illustration: LINK Architecture
  • Arild Mathisen at Statsbygg has become accustomed to tackling challenges head on. Photo: Tore Stensvold
  • SINTEF Ocean CEO Vegar Johansen is looking forward to offering the world’s best water flow and hyper-advanced test equipment when the pool building is completed in 2029. Photo: SINTEF
  • The laboratories will provide a significant boost to teaching and research, as well as welcome other institutes and research environments that need low-threshold testing and development, says Sverre Steen. Photo: NTNU
  • The new ocean basin building will include an adjustable wall that makes it possible to run confidential tests in both pools at the same time. Illustration: LINK Architecture
  • The extra reinforcement is intended to ensure that the building is extra stable. Photo: Tore Stensvold
15/04/2026 SINTEF
Regions: Europe, Norway
Keywords: Applied science, Engineering, Science, Agriculture & fishing, Environment - science, Grants & new facilities

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