The Day

Renovated UConn vessel heads back out onto water

R/V Connecticu­t, now 14 feet longer, to map Sound

- By MARTHA SHANAHAN Day Staff Writer

Groton — A tiny seam running down the side of the Research Vessel Connecticu­t is all that’s visible of the months-long, $2.5 million project to cut the boat in half and expand it by 14 feet.

But the extra space inside the UConn vessel’s cabin will mean more students and researcher­s will be able to use the R/V Connecticu­t for long research trips, and will make the vessel an even more popular tool for scientists to rent, researcher­s said Monday, hours before the boat set off on its first major research trip since work on the boat began.

Nine researcher­s from UConn, the University of New Haven and the U.S. Geological Survey were to set off for a week on Long Island Sound early this morning, collecting detailed data for a National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion project to map the floor of the Sound.

That number of people would never have fit on the R/V Connecticu­t before the boat was expanded, said Turner Cabaniss, marine and waterfront operations manager at UConn Avery Point.

“The space has probably tripled,” Cabaniss said.

The vessel, which usually is docked at the University of Connecticu­t’s Avery Point campus, has been out of commission since February while workers at Blount Boats in Warren, R.I., severed the boat, creating a large gap in the middle and adding room for additional bunks and labs in the cabin and steel on sides. They then welded the boat back together, leaving only a small, painted-over seam on the outside and enough space for six additional scientists on the inside.

Delays in constructi­on and acquiring equipment meant the original finish date was pushed back several months from July to this fall.

The vessel was finally put back in the water and used for a one-day research trip into the Sound earlier this month, which went smoothly, Cabaniss said.

“There were a lot of little bugs to work out, but everything is fine,” he said.

It will set off again this morning on its first major expedition since the repairs, taking Ivar Babb, the director of the Northeast Underwater Research, Technology & Education Center, with it, along with eight researcher­s from three institutio­ns.

They will use high-definition cameras and tools to collect sediment from 90 sites on the bottom of the Sound, data that will contribute to the NOAA mapping project. The work is being funded with a $1.38 million settlement between the two states that share the Sound — Connecticu­t and New York — and the Long Island Power Authority, Northeast Utilities and the Cross Sound Cable Co. over adverse impacts caused by an underwater utility cable.

Graduate students will use the new onboard labs to sift through the sediment and analyze it, then send it to Columbia University for further testing, Babb said Monday.

The trip comes not a minute too soon for Babb, who said he and the other researcher­s are eager to start work while the weather is still good enough.

“We really wanted to be out in August,” he said. “We need to get out now.”

The vessel will also now be available to other research institutio­ns that may rent it for thousands of dollars a day, and it is already booked by organizati­ons such as the Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Researcher­s and crew of the University of Connecticu­t’s research vessel R/V Connecticu­t load scientific equipment Monday at Avery Point in Groton.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Researcher­s and crew of the University of Connecticu­t’s research vessel R/V Connecticu­t load scientific equipment Monday at Avery Point in Groton.

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