by Kevin Griffin
Last week Seabourn announced that it was ordering a fourth ship of
the Seabourn Odyssey class, which will serve to replace most of the
capacity lost by the sale of its original trio to Windstar Cruises, with
deliveries over 2014 and 2015. Meanwhile, Silversea has increased its
fleet of expedition ships to three. Elsewhere, QE2 Shipping has placed a
contract with COSCO Shipyard Group for conversion of the Queen
Elizabeth 2 into a 400-room floating hotel, to be based at an as yet
unnamed major city in Asia. Meanwhile, rumours seem to indicate that
Royal Caribbean International intends to base its new Anthem of the Seas
at Southampton from 2015.
THIS WEEK’S STORY
Seabourn’s New Order Changes Balance With Silversea
Seabourn and Silversea have usually fought head-to-head for primacy
in the smaller-ship ultra-luxury sector. But Seabourn’s pending sales of
the three smaller ships and the latest letter of intent with Italy’s
Fincantieri for a new ultra-luxury cruise ship for delivery in the
second half of 2016 will change the overall balance.
After a five-year gap, the new ship will be a follow-on from the new
450-berth trio that the line introduced in 2009-11 with Seabourn
Odyssey, Sojourn and Quest, and will be the fourth ship of this class.
Seabourn Quest
Arch-competitor Silversea seems to be going down a different road from Seabourn, however.
Unlike Seabourn, Silversea built only one ship of its latest class, the 540-berth Silver Spirit, and never ordered any more.
It will soon therefore be outgunned by Seabourn in the 450/550-berth
ultra-luxury range four ships to one by Seabourn, although overall it
will be able to offer a few more berths:
Also unlike Seabourn, however, Silversea has been investing in
expedition ships, an area outside Seabourn’s area of expertise. Starting
in 2007 with the 132-berth Finnish-built Prince Albert II, renamed
Silver Explorer in 2011, it added the 100-berth Silver Galapagos three
weeks ago and will introduce the 128-berth Silver Discoverer in March
2014.
Silver Explorer ex Prince Albert II
The Silver Galapagos was one of eight original Renaissance small
ships, built in 1990 in Italy. The Silver Discoverer had been sailing as
the Clipper Odyssey for Zegrahm Expeditions. She is one of a very small
number of Japanese-built cruise and expedition ships, having been built
for Showa Line by NKK Tsu (now Universal Shipbuilding) in 1989 as
Oceanic Grace.
In all, this adds three ships but only 360 berths to Silversea’s
inventory, brining the total number of lower berths to 2,268, or about
25% more than Seabourn.
While Silversea will be up to eight ships, including the three
expedition ships, Seabourn’s fleet will be streamlined to just four
Seabourn Odyssey class ships after it disposes of its smaller 212-berth
trio to Windstar Cruises. Seabourn Pride is to become Star Pride in
April 2014, Seabourn Legend will follow as Star Legend one year later
and Seabourn Spirit will become Star Spirit in May 2015.
Seabourn Pride in Malaga. She will become Star Pride in April 2014
These timings also mean that Seabourn will be at three ships for a year before the latest newbuilding enters service in 2016.
Ironically, the three Seabourn ships will not be moving far as new
owners Windstar Cruises are on Seattle’s Fourth Avenue, only a little
over a mile away from Seabourn’s head office on Elliott Avenue, where
they lodge with Holland America Line.
Windstar is a division of Xanterra Parks & Resorts, based in
Greater Denver, in turn part of Denver-based Anschutz, while Seabourn is
a subsidiary of Miami-based Carnival Corp & PLC. Silversea is still
family-owned and based in Monaco.
OTHER CRUISE NEWS
QE2 On The Way To Asia
The Dubai-based QE2 Shipping LLC last week announced the appointment
of COSCO Shipyard Group to refurbish the former Cunard Transatlantic
liner Queen Elizabeth 2 into a luxury floating hotel. In this £62m
conversion, her 900 cabins are to be converted into 400 larger suites
ranging from 650 to 1,600 square feet in size.
While the transformation is under way, memorabilia is to removed from
the ship and stored in a secure warehouse in Singapore, to be
reassembled after the renovation is complete.
Ownership of the Queen Elizabeth 2 has meanwhile been transferred to a
consortium of investors in QE2 Shipping, which will also oversee the
ship’s management as a hotel. The chairman of the new company, Khamis
Juma Buamim, is as well chairman of Dubai’s Drydocks World LLC.
The ship has been at Dubai, where an initial idea to convert her into a floating hotel locally never went ahead, since 2008.
The ship has been at Dubai, where an initial idea to convert her into a floating hotel locally never went ahead, since 2008.
The QE2 has now been brought back to class with Lloyd’s Register and
it is intended that she will soon depart from Dubai under her own power
for COSCO’s Zhoushan shipyard, south of Shanghai, for her conversion
work. She is then scheduled to be delivered as a floating hotel in 2015.
It had been hoped QE2 would leave Dubai in a
“gala sail off”
on Friday, with stops at Singapore and Hong Kong before arriving at the
Chinese shipyard. At the moment, however, she is still in Dubai and the
company has not yet provided any new timetable.
The winning bidder, COSCO Shipyard Group, is a joint venture between
China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO) and Singapore’s Sembcorp Marine.
The group specializes in ship repair and conversion, newbuilding and
offshore unit construction. Three other Chinese shipyard groups were
also invited to tender. Khamis Juma Buamim said:
“No other ship can match the QE2’s prestige, or her legacy.
She is an absolute icon of maritime history, one of the best and most
powerful ships in the world. Therefore, our decision on a partner was
critical. We are pleased to be working closely with COSCO Shipyard for
the technical repair and refurbishment process, which will be carried
out with the utmost respect to the QE2’s heritage and splendour.”
Sun Princess
Although, this will be the first cruise such conversion project in a
Chinese shipyard, Sembcorp has done similar work at its Sembawang
shipyard in Singapore, one of Asia’s best-known shipyards for passenger
ship work.
The recent modernization by Sembawang of Princess Cruises’ 1,950-berth
Sun Princess for the Japanese market was successful enough that Princess
Cruises has awarded a further project to Sembawang for modernization of
its 2,674-berth Diamond Princess, work on which is to commence in
March.
Meanwhile, under the title
“Project New Life,” seven
international firms have been invited to submit design proposals for the
QE2’s interior refurbishment. Proposals from US companies BG Studio,
Jerde Partnership and Wilson Associates, UK-based Benoy, the Finnish
firm Dsign Vertti Kivi, Italy’s Santarossa and Singapore’s Ong & Ong
will be showcased on the official QE2 website for public review between
October 15 and November 15, 2013. The winning proposal will be
announced on November 30.
QE2
Daniel Chui, president and chief executive of QE2 Shipping and
managing director of Oceanic Group of Singapore, partners in the
conversion, said:
“The ship’s redevelopment is a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity for any interior design professional to create what will
become one of Asia’s major waterfront tourist attractions. The goal for
the final design is to preserve the soul of the QE2 – many of the
original furnishings and much of the décor will be incorporated – while
creating a modern luxury hotel. The key to this project is to keep the
essence of the QE2. It’s an iconic ship that still has a lot of emotion
attached to it.”
Other work will see a revamp of the ballroom as well as the refitting
of seven restaurants, ten lounges, a cinema, a maritime museum
displaying QE2 memorabilia and a shopping mall. The future location of
QE2 in Asia following the refurbishment has not yet been announced.
Carnival Cruise Lines’ ship in Long Beach. In the background the Queen Mary (Photo A. Newman)
The former 70,327-ton former Cunard flagship carried almost 2.5
million passengers and completed more than 700 Atlantic crossings during
her forty-year career with Cunard Line. The 81.237–ton Queen Mary of
1936, is now a floating hotel at Long Beach, California, while the
83,673–ton Queen Elizabeth of 1940 burned at Hong Kong in January 1972
while being converted into a floating university.
Cunard Line’s present flagship, the 148,528-ton Queen Mary 2, which
marks ten years in service in 2014, is the fourth Cunard Transatlantic
Queen.
Anthem of the Seas For Southampton?
Rumours have been making the rounds for the past few weeks suggesting
that the company may be about to unveil the employment of Anthem of the
Seas, the second unit in its 167,800-ton Quantum class, from
Southampton in the Spring of 2015, when she is scheduled for delivery
from Meyer Werft in Germany.
If true this will give the UK its first North Star pod, whose design is
apparently based on those on the Millennium Wheel in London.
Independence of the Seas
For a while, future berth reservations for the French port of Le
Havre showed Anthem of the Seas arriving from Southampton in 2015 or
heading for Southampton after calling at the French port. Not featuring
in the same advance 2015 lists is the Independence of the Seas, the
current Southampton-based ship, although the 3,114-berth Adventure of
the Seas, which is also operating a series of cruises from the UK this
year, is included.
It seems the Le Havre lists have now been switched back from Anthem
to Independence but that may just be to keep a cover on the news.
The reported 2015 Anthem itineraries reflect those now being operated
by the Independence of the Seas so it could well be that Royal
Caribbean International is planning for the 4,100-berth Anthem to
replace the 3,634–berth Independence, thus upping the berth capacity on
its main UK-based ship by 12.5%.
At the same time, Royal Caribbean would be pipping out P&O’s new
Britannia, which at 141,000 tons and 3,600 berths will be smaller than
either Royal Caribbean ship, as the largest ship based in the UK.
Britannia will also be slightly smaller than Cunard Line’s Queen Mary 2
at any rate, but Anthem of the Seas would definitely usurp both as the
largest ship calling on Southampton.
Britannia. The new P&O flagship. The 141,000-ton 3,611-berth cruise ship is scheduled to enter service in March 2015
Nevertheless, it would be an interesting day when all of Anthem of
the Seas, Queen Mary 2 and Britannia are all in Southampton together, as
among them the three ships can carry in excess of 10,000 passengers.
On another point, the Quantum class vessels have been designed as
“winter ships,”
with what would be outdoor activities on most ships taking place
instead under a glass roof. The class also features more
multi-functionality of indoor areas than most other ships do.
This raises another interesting question, as while Independence of the
Seas served year-round from Southampton at first, more recently her
winter departures have been cut back. Perhaps the Anthem could be a
return to year-round cruising from the UK for Royal Caribbean.
Quantum of the Seas, lead unit of the class, is scheduled to operate
out of Bayonne, New Jersey, from late 2014, when she is due to be
completed. New York too requires winterized ships for year-round
service, something that has been developing in a number of areas over
the past decade of so.
Without disclosing any details, meanwhile, Royal Caribbean
International has scheduled a media event to be held in London on
November 21.
(Kevin
Griffin is managing director of specialist cruise agency The Cruise
People Ltd in London, England. For further information concerning
cruises mentioned in this article readers can visit his blog)