
Rise of the Machine: Inside the $245,000 Wellness Chamber
We try the $245,000 wellness chamber that pro athletes and biohackers are obsessed with.
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The Chamber With Bold Promises
At a passing glance, you might think the Ammortal Chamber was a set piece made for the Dune cinematic universe. The brutalist look of its two halves, which are bisected by a lightning-bolt-shaped sheet of acrylic that glows red when activated, has the air of a concrete relic from the distant future.
But the growing class of champions for this machine—which combines photobiomodulation, pulsed electromagnetic frequency, molecular hydrogen, guided meditation and vibroacoustic therapies into a single treatment—claims it has myriad real-life benefits.
Early Converts and Their Results
“Very quickly, I started regrowing hair,” says Jonathan Krieger, cofounder of Padel United Sports Club, a high-end racquet facility in Cresskill, New Jersey, that houses one of the devices. He credits the red-light component of his three or four sessions per week with improving the appearance of his skin, too.
The other upsides he’s noticed are even more impressive. “Inflammation? Down 70 percent,” he estimates. “My sleeping, which was always a little whatever, just became much more consistent. My energy and my general state of stress, I would say, just shifted.”
And while, in this writer’s experience, one session can be uniquely calming, restorative and even fun, Ammortal’s CEO Brian Le Gette has observed that regular use has compounding benefits.
“This is a wellness product, not a clinical, medical device,” he says as a caveat before sharing anecdotes about user feedback. “We have thousands of people who’ve had tremendous pain reduction. We’ve had people who’ve had trauma releases inside this thing, and they’re weeping afterwards,” he says. One collegiate lacrosse player used the chamber before a game and scored five of her team’s six goals. Before that, Le Gette adds, “She’d never come remotely close to two.”

What is it like to use, then?
The contraption dispenses all its treatments simultaneously, in 15-, 25- or 50-minute sessions. Donning underwear is recommended to ensure most of your skin is exposed to the red light, and that the near-infrared light can help treat your joints; some people go nude, though. Covers are provided to shield eyes from the light, and a sterile cannula is attached to a tank enabling you to breathe in the hydrogen.
When settled in, a touchscreen allows you to select from a range of voices as guides. Like a meditation instructor, the voice gives different directives about breathing and visualisation, depending on the user. The more sessions logged, the more personalised such directions become. But in any case, the goal is to help individuals reach a state of calm before the top half of the chamber lowers and the lights come on. “You have to be really calm,” Le Gette says, for your body to be receptive to so many treatments at once.
I spent 25 minutes in the chamber, taking deep breaths when told to, and nearly falling asleep because of the soothing soundtrack of spa-like music. When I was done, I felt somehow serene and energetic simultaneously, with a clear sense of focus that is hard to come by in this notification-riddled world.
Who’s Buying Into It
While a variety of studies suggest that each of these therapies is beneficial when used on their own, Le Gette is hopeful that several clinical trials, to be conducted over the next 12 months or so, will validate that they’re powerful when stacked together. In the meantime, he has plenty of clients who have already bought into the machine. While 60 percent of Ammortal sales have gone to institutions—such as the Denver Broncos NFL team or the Santa Monica Proper Hotel, the latter of which has a chamber in its recovery room—the rest belong to individuals, many of whom are professional athletes who want to bounce back faster from their training routines.
But Le Gette’s overall goal is to make the Ammortal experience as accessible as possible. “This is something that should be in every gym,” he says. “Everyone who can afford a membership to something to do with their health should be able to get access.” That may take years to accomplish, but to that end, his team is already working on versions that provide similar benefits without the $245,000 price tag of the flagship model.
One thing that may not change is its distinctive shape; the Ammortal designers borrowed it from NASA, which researched the best angles to support people of heights from 4’8” to 6’8” [142 cm to 203 cm] on their journeys into outer space.
“They figured out that this back bend, hip bend and knee bend was perfect for continuing to keep blood flow through the body,” Le Gette says. “And what we found was, when we take that shape and vibrate it with very specific frequencies, it can feel like you’re floating.” It’s just another one of the many details that leave you feeling like you can walk on air.
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