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Author Topic: New Norwegian Epic pics
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 04-14-2010 01:12 PM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
HULL ART

Stern view

Bow on

In drydock


Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
Dutch
First Class Passenger
Member # 14009

posted 04-14-2010 01:42 PM      Profile for Dutch   Email Dutch   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Epic's more abstract hull art is the best of the NCL fleet. Wish they would tone down the Sun, Jewel and Gem's hull art to match.
Posts: 168 | From: Chicago, IL USA | Registered: Mar 2008  |  IP: Logged
Frosty 4
First Class Passenger
Member # 5826

posted 04-14-2010 01:59 PM      Profile for Frosty 4   Email Frosty 4   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Hull Art or not it's still UGLY!!!
F4

Posts: 2531 | From: Illinois | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged
DAMBROSI
First Class Passenger
Member # 100

posted 04-14-2010 02:58 PM      Profile for DAMBROSI   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I agree, no sleek lines...just dreadful. As a Post Script...the NORWAY, even though she had that terrible addition to her top deck just under the foreward funnel, looked better than EPIC does.

[ 04-14-2010: Message edited by: DAMBROSI ]


Posts: 2554 | From: Florida, USA, Where the Legend SS NORWAY sailed from. Moving back to FL next yr. | Registered: May 99  |  IP: Logged
Atlcruiser
First Class Passenger
Member # 4586

posted 04-14-2010 03:18 PM      Profile for Atlcruiser   Email Atlcruiser   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
She looks better from her aft than the bow. That stack of metal over her bridge just makes her one ugly ship. NCL now has two ships in the fleet competing for the ugly duckling award.
Posts: 916 | From: Atlanta | Registered: Mar 2004  |  IP: Logged
Cunard Fan
First Class Passenger
Member # 7530

posted 04-14-2010 04:15 PM      Profile for Cunard Fan   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I am actually starting to like her looks better then I did before. I personally think she is better looking then for example Azura.
Posts: 2327 | From: Pasadena just north of Queen Mary | Registered: Sep 2006  |  IP: Logged
Kevin Griffin, London
First Class Passenger
Member # 6010

posted 04-14-2010 04:38 PM      Profile for Kevin Griffin, London   Author's Homepage   Email Kevin Griffin, London   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Wow! This is one plug ugly kitten! We tend to think that the French are good at design but as well as the real beauties they did produce some ugly ships even in the 1930s. Remember those double square lipped funnels? And the cars whose doors hinged the wrong way and whose window opening handles turned the wrong way? NCL now has its own "contest of the dogs" - let's just hope that the Norwegian Epic and Pride of America never meet!

[ 04-14-2010: Message edited by: Kevin Griffin, London ]


Posts: 148 | From: London, England | Registered: Oct 2005  |  IP: Logged
DEIx15x8
First Class Passenger
Member # 14958

posted 04-15-2010 12:17 AM      Profile for DEIx15x8   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
In the last pictures that were posted of her sailing she had some good angles but in this set there is no way to look at her in a way that doesn't make her look horrible.
Posts: 521 | From: Kutztown, PA | Registered: Apr 2008  |  IP: Logged
H.M.S.Bonaventure
First Class Passenger
Member # 17509

posted 04-15-2010 01:08 AM      Profile for H.M.S.Bonaventure   Email H.M.S.Bonaventure   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I think that the Norwegian Epic looks much better on the outside and inside than the Oasis of the Seas. I like the hull art on all of NCL's ships, from the Gem to the Sun. I have always enjoyed sailing with NCL, and am looking forward to my 2 day FAM trip in July and then my cruise in December both on the EPIC.
Posts: 13 | From: Toronto, Ontario Canada | Registered: Sep 2008  |  IP: Logged
Dutch
First Class Passenger
Member # 14009

posted 04-15-2010 07:29 AM      Profile for Dutch   Email Dutch   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Epic is still not fully painted. When the white overspray window coverings are removed from the top deck villa housing (and they appear as dark/black window bands), I suspect the appearance of bulk will be minimized.

Side view of Epic is OK, stern view is squared off but not that different than most ships. It's the bow view that really emphasizes the villa installation and causes ship lovers to howl.

She'll never be a beauty, but I agree that she looks better from several angles than the Azura/Grand class.

RCCL did a better job streamlining Oasis, but she's by no means attractive on the exterior either.

QM2 and Freedom Class remain the best looking ultra-large ships.


Posts: 168 | From: Chicago, IL USA | Registered: Mar 2008  |  IP: Logged
Ernst
First Class Passenger
Member # 5369

posted 04-15-2010 08:04 AM      Profile for Ernst   Author's Homepage   Email Ernst   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Kevin Griffin, London:
Wow! This is one plug ugly kitten! We tend to think that the French are good at design [...]

Why do you think that she is a 'french' design? Just because she is built in France?


quote:
Originally posted by Dutch:
Epic is still not fully painted. When the white overspray window coverings are removed from the top deck villa housing (and they appear as dark/black window bands), I suspect the appearance of bulk will be minimized. [...]


I also think that this will make a huge difference.
She is not a beauty but hardly any contemporary passenger ship is beautiful.

Personally and from what I have seen sofar I think her most attractive angle is from astern. It's a very simple and clear form without tacky attempts to hide the 'boxy' shape.


Posts: 9746 | From: Eindhoven | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
Lubber
First Class Passenger
Member # 13710

posted 04-15-2010 08:11 AM      Profile for Lubber     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Cunard Fan:
I am actually starting to like her looks better then I did before. I personally think she is better looking then for example Azura.

I have to agree-- Azura is the worst.

I'm starting to get baffled by all the hate toward NCL Epic. I agree; it's not QE2, and neither was Pride of America. However, Oasis isn't QE2 either, and the aforementioned Azura is even less QE2-ish. I'm really excited about sailing Solstice pretty soon, and frankly she isn't exactly QE2 either-- from some bow angles, she's even uglier than Epic.

Epic's stern looks like a hotel shuttle bus writ large. I'm fine with that-- it's aesthetically neutral. Azura's stern is horrendous.


Posts: 241 | From: Land | Registered: Feb 2008  |  IP: Logged
OceanVoyager
First Class Passenger
Member # 5585

posted 04-15-2010 10:05 AM      Profile for OceanVoyager   Email OceanVoyager   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Lubber:

I have to agree-- Azura is the worst.

Azura's stern is horrendous.


With the Stern bar now being right behind the funnel, it's not as distinctive as the original Grand/Golden/Star/Caribbean Princess, but to say Azura is worse than the Epic, mmmmm, I can't say I agree.

If it wasn't for the 5 storey apartment block above the bridge, Epic would look quite nice.


Posts: 627 | From: Hythe, Southampton, UK | Registered: Apr 2005  |  IP: Logged
Kevin Griffin, London
First Class Passenger
Member # 6010

posted 04-15-2010 10:06 AM      Profile for Kevin Griffin, London   Author's Homepage   Email Kevin Griffin, London   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Ernst:

Originally posted by Kevin Griffin, London:
Wow! This is one plug ugly kitten! We tend to think that the French are good at design [...]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Why do you think that she is a 'french' design? Just because she is built in France?
.


Well the French didn't seem to be able to talk them out of it, but if you look back she has certain similarities to MSC ships that preceded her, even all the way back to Mistral, which started the MSC trail. But as John Heald said in his Carnival blog:- "But there’s an even darker side to credit cards……..one that like who the hell designed the Norwegian Epic……. is rarely talked about.

Who did design this monstrosity then? And I don't mean Senor Mortadella or Mrs Simpson the interior designers.


Posts: 148 | From: London, England | Registered: Oct 2005  |  IP: Logged
Kevin Griffin, London
First Class Passenger
Member # 6010

posted 04-15-2010 10:25 AM      Profile for Kevin Griffin, London   Author's Homepage   Email Kevin Griffin, London   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
And as to Azura, that new ducktail makes her look real ducky. She's probably the "best-looking" or "least bad-looking" of the Grands - at least she does not look like a Tesco trolley. And the refined way only the sides of the funnel have been painted in P&O buff actually make her look a bit of a lady, and minimise that straw basket birds nest excuse for a smokestack. She looks far better than Ventura from that point of view.
Posts: 148 | From: London, England | Registered: Oct 2005  |  IP: Logged
Thad
First Class Passenger
Member # 1224

posted 04-15-2010 10:47 AM      Profile for Thad   Email Thad   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Interesting, I think that the mixed white and buff funnel on Azura looks worse than the all buff now on Ventura. I do not mind the ducktail at all. The Grand Class has definitely grown on me, and I find them very interesting to look at, though not really pretty.
Posts: 1967 | From: Boston, MA | Registered: Apr 2000  |  IP: Logged
Ernst
First Class Passenger
Member # 5369

posted 04-15-2010 12:36 PM      Profile for Ernst   Author's Homepage   Email Ernst   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Kevin Griffin, London:

Well the French didn't seem to be able to talk them out of it, but if you look back she has certain similarities to MSC ships that preceded her, even all the way back to Mistral, which started the MSC trail. [...]


That's not how it works. A shipyard is not 'talking someone out of a design'. Shipyards are grateful for orders and they build what the customers specifies.

Of course each shipyard has a different approach and each yard prefers certain suppliers or companies to collaborate with but at the end of the day it's the decision of the customer. Beside that, most aspects of ships discussed in this forum are hardly characteristic for a certain shipyard.

Concerning the design of Norwegian Epic look at e.g. www.tillbergdesign.com.


Posts: 9746 | From: Eindhoven | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
Kevin Griffin, London
First Class Passenger
Member # 6010

posted 04-15-2010 01:45 PM      Profile for Kevin Griffin, London   Author's Homepage   Email Kevin Griffin, London   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Thanks Ernst but Tillberg do interior design. I want to know who are the "navel" architects who did the line drawings and general arrangement for this ship?

By the way, as to how it works, the Seven Seas Mariner was actually built on the Mistral platform from this yard, which is why she has double corridors rather than single corridor's on Marriotti's Seven Seas Voyager. The Mariner even had the former master of the Mistral when she first came out. That's how it works.

Compare the Epic and Fantasia and you will find a lot of similarities by the way. Ships that differed from this "MSC" style evolution were the Renaissance and Celebrity ships that were also built at St Nazaire.

[ 04-15-2010: Message edited by: Kevin Griffin, London ]


Posts: 148 | From: London, England | Registered: Oct 2005  |  IP: Logged
Kevin Griffin, London
First Class Passenger
Member # 6010

posted 04-15-2010 02:05 PM      Profile for Kevin Griffin, London   Author's Homepage   Email Kevin Griffin, London   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Possibly Navtec Naval Engineering of Nantes, who claim to have done work on :

MSC cruise ship series (2006/07)
MSC cruise ship series (2008/09)
NCL cruise ship series (2007/09)

The earlier NCL ships of course were the work of Meyer Werft and there are even some similarities there with Oriana and Aurora.

Would be interesting to know who actually did the Epic though, as the earlier NCL series are all queens in comparison.


Posts: 148 | From: London, England | Registered: Oct 2005  |  IP: Logged
buddhaJoe
First Class Passenger
Member # 4356

posted 04-15-2010 02:25 PM      Profile for buddhaJoe   Email buddhaJoe   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
to me Epic and Oasis are the best examples of how
exteriour design of cruise making money ships have
gone in the wrong direction

already someone said that most sterns are like this one today, and how true and sad that may become
true... but not so long ago look at the
ms Oriana and ms Aurora where they did a very fine job... as the new Carnival Dream has
not a bad stern either....

furtermore i keep repeating that the lick of paint
on the NCL ships have nothing to do with art
there is a very nice museum there in Chicago
you may have a look around....

the Epic is remarkable, but will never be remembered for it's beauty, and it's never been
purposed for that...

regards,
b.Joe


Posts: 366 | From: De Goorn, small village in The Netherlands | Registered: Jan 2004  |  IP: Logged
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 04-15-2010 03:05 PM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by buddhaJoe:
furtermore i keep repeating that the lick of paint on the NCL ships have nothing to do with art
there is a very nice museum there in Chicago
you may have a look around....

I'm sure you're not referring to the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago? Maybe you were referring to the more traditional Art Institue of Chicago.

I am sure the MoMA in NYC has galleries full of 'art' that most wouldn't even consider as art. There were plenty of paintings on the Century-class ships that some wouldn't consider as art. Grafitti 'tags' are also an art form, some quite complex. Either way, and as the old saying goes, art is in the eye of the beholder. Traditional or not, the designs blazened on the side of NCL's ship are 'art'.


Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
Ernst
First Class Passenger
Member # 5369

posted 04-15-2010 03:13 PM      Profile for Ernst   Author's Homepage   Email Ernst   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Kevin Griffin, London:
Thanks Ernst but Tillberg do interior design. I want to know who are the "navel" architects who did the line drawings and general arrangement for this ship? ...]

Tilberg is of course an interior designer and only one of many companies involved in the design of Norwegian Epic (or other ships).

Concerning the 'naval architect' part: Usually the engineering is also shared between several different specialized companies. Some engineering is of course done at the shipyard but there are usually many companies involved who consult the shipyard or the cruise line in these matters (companies specialized in CFD or model tests, regulations etc.).

quote:
Originally posted by Kevin Griffin, London:

By the way, as to how it works, the Seven Seas Mariner was actually built on the Mistral platform from this yard, which is why she has double corridors rather than single corridor's on Marriotti's Seven Seas Voyager. The Mariner even had the former master of the Mistral when she first came out. That's how it works. [...]

Again, it depends a lot on the customer.

There are of course things or approaches which are characteristic for certain shipyards and shipyards indeed take advantage of what they designed for previously built ships - but this is more related to how the ship is actually built and not the aspects of the design we discuss here.

Often a (more or less refined) concept exists when cruise lines ask shipyards for bids and each shipyard has a different approach on how to realize this concept. It can indeed be the case that a shipyard decides to build a 'new design' 'atop' an existing, slightly modified hull design. There are many examples of rather different ships that actually share quite a lot of similarities or might even be built on similar platforms.

However, even if ships have such similarities which are characteristic for a certain yard: These similarities hardly manifest themselves in the overall exterior appearance (at best in details). You can certainly not blame the shipyard for the exterior appearance of Norwegian Epic.


Posts: 9746 | From: Eindhoven | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
PamM
First Class Passenger
Member # 2127

posted 04-15-2010 04:39 PM      Profile for PamM   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Kevin Griffin, London:
Possibly Navtec Naval Engineering of Nantes, who claim to have done work on :
NCL cruise ship series (2007/09)

It appears to have possibly been their subsidiary
NEIPL at Bangalore with tendancies towards an "offshore installation" piled on her brow.

Pam


Posts: 12176 | From: Cambridge, UK | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
Frosty 4
First Class Passenger
Member # 5826

posted 04-15-2010 07:37 PM      Profile for Frosty 4   Email Frosty 4   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
You have to admit with all the talk about this ship one wonders if this is exactly what NCL wanted.
Some will want to sail on her just to"check it out"-especially the "Block House" forward.
Let's wait and see want reports are made hopefully on our Ship Review site here.
Anyone here already booked? If so PLEASE give us a review!!!
Frosty4

Posts: 2531 | From: Illinois | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged
Dutch
First Class Passenger
Member # 14009

posted 04-15-2010 09:57 PM      Profile for Dutch   Email Dutch   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Many have said it before, but most of the traveling public won't give two thoughts to Epic's exterior aesthetics... just as few folks would select one hotel in Miami or Vegas over another because it's exterior facade is more attractive. Interiors are another story.

I was in charge of planning an extended family cruise next year. I gave brochures of Oasis & Epic to all 20 folks in our group and asked them to decide. Based upon the diverse dining, aqua park, non-traditional nightlife and unique cabin arrangements, every single person said "Epic". No one hesitated because her superstructure is a bit bulky.

So... Epic beat Oasis on traveler appeal... despite her looks.

I wish more attention had been given to a cohesive design, but I still can't wait to sail her.


Posts: 168 | From: Chicago, IL USA | Registered: Mar 2008  |  IP: Logged

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