To be fair, in 2006, the Seas looked ancient. Everyone thought the future looked like a sleek video game from an alien planet, and the old EPCOT Center architecture was a relic from the early ‘80s. Look at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in LA for an extreme example of the public’s vision of the future. With their bleached woods and pewter hardware, stores like Gap and Banana Republic felt fresh and modern.
Nobody could’ve predicted the old Epcot architecture would become attractive again, and angles would become “authentic” and “realistic,” while those cold colors and bleached woods would look like a blip on the trends of the late ‘90s and early ‘00s.
But I agree with you. Since hindsight is 20/20, it’s time to return to Seabase Alpha. It still needs to be updated to the future — not a carbon-copy of the ‘80s — but grounded back in reality to sell the idea you’re really underwater. High-tech hydrolators wouldn’t hurt, either.