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April 18, 2007

Update: Old Russian sub succumbs, sinks / Photo

subsunk1.jpg
Journal photo / Andrew Dickerman
A boarding ramp leads well into the water, beneath whose surface the sub now rests. It's 28 feet deep at the dock, then slopes off from there.


PROVIDENCE – “The Russian Sunken Sub Museum” is how engineer Damon Ise answered the phone this morning.

Yes, sometime in the evening, the listing submarine laid over on its side and sank, Ise said.

All that’s visible is the submarine’s periscope, sticking up out of the water at an angle, a radio antenna and one of the sub’s orange life buoys, Ise said.

“One of those [buoys] is bouncing and dancing on the surface, and then there’s just a trail of bubbles coming from the front,” he said. “It’s very sad.”

No fuel is leaking from the vessel, Ise said, and crews are working already on a salvage plan with a professional from New York.

Exactly what shape that salvage plan would take is, well, murky at this point, museum officials said today.

The vessel, berthed at Collier Point Park, had been battered by the storm that hit the region early this week. It had been restored as a floating museum after being bought in 2002.

By midday, TV crews and other members of the press joined several Coast Guard officers and staff of the submarine museum at the small, windswept park overlooking Providence Harbor.

Lines ran along the dock, down to the sub, holding it in place on the bottom. The antenna, and a small, pipelike-protusion stuck up from the relatively calm surface of the water.

Off in the distance, only one other vessel could be seen, a tanker.

Nearby, a sign for Cardi's Furniture -- featuring the three Cardi brothers in sailor suits – urged visitors to follow safety tips, some of which were painfully obvious today:

"Be sure to use caution when in the sub" and "Appropriate footwear required; decks may be slippery."


-- projo.com staff writers Kate Bramson and Michael McKinney

The sub's Web site is still up and operational, however -- though dated.

As it has since before the storm took its toll, it simply states that the Juliett 484 is closed for maintenance, and says it is expected to re-open soon on the normal spring schedule.

It also contains a link to the museum store, where you can buy items such as a T-shirt with the message, “My museum can sink your museum.”

Posted by Kate Bramson  at 1:48 PM | Permalink

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