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» Cruise Talk   » Cruise Lines   » New Princess order - 139,000 tons, 2013 + 2014 delivery (Page 1)

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Author Topic: New Princess order - 139,000 tons, 2013 + 2014 delivery
Mattsudds
First Class Passenger
Member # 4324

posted 02-17-2010 10:01 AM      Profile for Mattsudds     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Carnival Corporation & plc Signs Memorandum of Agreement for Two Ships for Its Princess Cruises Brand
MIAMI, Feb 17, 2010 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Carnival Corporation & plc (NYSE/LSE: CCL; NYSE: CUK) has signed a memorandum of agreement with Italian shipbuilder Fincantieri for the construction of two 3,600-passenger cruise ships for its Princess Cruises brand. The agreement is subject to execution of a definitive contract, financing and other customary closing conditions. The new ships - which will have an all-in cost of approximately euro 155,000 per lower berth - are scheduled to enter service in spring 2013 and spring 2014. At 139,000 tons each, the as-yet-unnamed ships will be the largest in the Princess Cruises fleet.

Comment: Uber Grand class? How disappointing that its another Fincantieri order, we might have got something different had it been Meyer, STX or Mitsubishi. Might but unlikely...

Posts: 80 | From: London, UK | Registered: Dec 2003  |  IP: Logged
Fairsky
First Class Passenger
Member # 781

posted 02-17-2010 11:02 AM      Profile for Fairsky   Email Fairsky   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
We don't know yet if the new ships will be enlarged Grand-Class designs or an entirely new hull. My guess, given CCL's track record, is that they will be Grand-Class derivatives. However, there could be an even worse possibility...

Carnival Magic is due from Fincantieri in 2011 and will be 130,000 tons with 3,600 passengers (the same size as the new Princess orders). It's possible that the new Princess ships could be based on the almost 20 year old Destiny-class hull design. Heaven forbid!

Let's hope that CCL is finally investing in a truly new design.


Posts: 1685 | From: Chicago, Illinois | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 02-17-2010 11:51 AM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Hey, at least it guarantees four more years of people complaining about clones, uber-clones, ships without character, boring designs, and comparisons between the lack of Carnival Corp's imagination and the great liners of the 1930's. Can't wait!
Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
cruiseshipluver
First Class Passenger
Member # 5104

posted 02-17-2010 12:52 PM      Profile for cruiseshipluver   Author's Homepage   Email cruiseshipluver   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
LOL, agreed dmwnc1

cruiseshipluver


Posts: 1797 | From: Barbados--cruiseship capital of the Southern Caribbean | Registered: Oct 2004  |  IP: Logged
Tim in Fort Lauderdale
First Class Passenger
Member # 953

posted 02-17-2010 07:43 PM      Profile for Tim in Fort Lauderdale     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Fairsky:
We don't know yet if the new ships will be enlarged Grand-Class designs or an entirely new hull. My guess, given CCL's track record, is that they will be Grand-Class derivatives. However, there could be an even worse possibility...

Carnival Magic is due from Fincantieri in 2011 and will be 130,000 tons with 3,600 passengers (the same size as the new Princess orders). It's possible that the new Princess ships could be based on the almost 20 year old Destiny-class hull design. Heaven forbid!

Let's hope that CCL is finally investing in a truly new design.


Micky and Alan Bucklew have stated on many occasions that these new ships will be an evolution of the Ruby Princess.

They will be slightly larger, evolved versions of the last ship in the Grand-Class.

Don't expect anything ground-breaking.

Tim


Posts: 1468 | From: Fort Lauderdale, FL | Registered: Dec 1999  |  IP: Logged
eroller
First Class Passenger
Member # 1649

posted 02-17-2010 07:57 PM      Profile for eroller     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Tim in 'Lauderdale:

Micky and Alan Bucklew have stated on many occasions that these new ships will be an evolution of the Ruby Princess.

They will be slightly larger, evolved versions of the last ship in the Grand-Class.

Don't expect anything ground-breaking.

Tim



Exactly.

How they can squeeze anymore revenue out of this design is beyond me, but if there is a way Carnival will figure it out.

I just wonder how it will look. The Grand Class design is already pretty butchered, after many years of Carnival "refinements".

Ernie


Posts: 7046 | From: Miami, Florida USA | Registered: Oct 2000  |  IP: Logged
Fairsky
First Class Passenger
Member # 781

posted 02-17-2010 08:25 PM      Profile for Fairsky   Email Fairsky   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
If nothing else i hope the come up with a new, more elegant funnel design. but i'm not holding my breath.
Posts: 1685 | From: Chicago, Illinois | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
desirod7
First Class Passenger
Member # 1626

posted 02-17-2010 10:23 PM      Profile for desirod7     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by eroller:


Exactly.

How they can squeeze anymore revenue out of this design is beyond me, but if there is a way Carnival will figure it out.

Ernie


Pay toilets!................................price goes up during norovirus outbreaks

[ 02-17-2010: Message edited by: desirod7 ]


Posts: 5727 | From: Philadelphia, Pa [home of the SS United States] | Registered: Oct 2000  |  IP: Logged
mike sa
First Class Passenger
Member # 5957

posted 02-18-2010 12:12 AM      Profile for mike sa   Author's Homepage   Email mike sa   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Take Ruby Princess and one giant air hose, attach and inflate.................

Probably a couple of extra restaurants, spa cabins etc.

A shame. And likely one of the lowest space per pax ratio ? But highest $ per pax.

As we have discussed before Princess sure has changed since going mass market.


Posts: 2272 | From: Durban, South Africa | Registered: Sep 2005  |  IP: Logged
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 02-18-2010 09:04 AM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I have a question of sorts for those who know all the technical aspects of ships.

When the Voyager-class turned into the Freedom-class there was an increase of roughly 15k tons (1 passenger deck and 92 feet of length). This new Princess ship will be a larger increase of 23k tons over the current Diamond/Ruby-class. If they are stretched proportionately (add 100 feet of length and enlarged another deck) it still makes them slightly smaller than the original Voyager-class yet still carrying 200+ fewer passengers.

What is then the coveted 'space ratio' comparison between the original Voyager of the Seas and the new Princess ship? I have heard so many people say the the Voyager of the Seas never felt crowded.


Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
dougnewman
First Class Passenger
Member # 11349

posted 02-18-2010 10:18 AM      Profile for dougnewman   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by dmwnc1:
What is then the coveted 'space ratio' comparison between the original Voyager of the Seas and the new Princess ship?
Space ratio is really easy to calculate.

Princess newbuild: 139,000/3,600=38.61
GRAND PRINCESS 108,806/2,600=41.85
CROWN PRINCESS 112,894/3,114=36.25
VOYAGER OF THE SEAS: 137,276/3,138=43.75
FREEDOM OF THE SEAS: 154,407/3,634=42.49
OASIS OF THE SEAS: 225,282/5,400=41.72
CARNIVAL CONQUEST: 110,239/2,974=37.07
CARNIVAL DREAM: 128,251/3,646=35.18
MSC FANTASIA: 137,936/3,300=41.8
NORWEGIAN EPIC: 153,000/4,200=36.43
CELEBRITY SOLSTICE: 121,878/2,850=42.76
QUEEN MARY 2: 148,528/2,514=59


Posts: 2072 | From: Long Island, NY, USA | Registered: Sep 2007  |  IP: Logged
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 02-18-2010 10:29 AM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
OK, here's another question. If we are comparing two ships and the space ratio difference being '3' what is that three mean? Say between 39 and 42?
Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
Linerrich
First Class Passenger
Member # 4864

posted 02-18-2010 11:18 AM      Profile for Linerrich   Email Linerrich   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by dmwnc1:
OK, here's another question. If we are comparing two ships and the space ratio difference being '3' what is that three mean? Say between 39 and 42?

The numbers in themselves don't mean a lot, it's really used for comparison purposes. Divide the gross tonnage of a ship by the basis-two pax load, and it gives you the amount of cubic square feet per person (one GRT is equal to 100 cubic feet.)

But many ships' designs are different, so these figures can be misleading; RCI's ships have huge atriums, and vast, soaring dining rooms filled with empty, open space that gets counted in the tonnage but is really unusable space. A more exact reference would be to somehow quantify the floor space (like in a house), and that would give you a better sense of space per person. But I don't know if those kinds of numbers are ever calculated with ships; certainly never used for these purposes.

Rich


Posts: 4210 | From: Miami, FL | Registered: Jul 2004  |  IP: Logged
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 02-18-2010 11:42 AM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
So a 3-4 cubic foot per person difference between the new Princess ship, Freedom OTS, MSC Slendida, Celebrity Solstice, and the Oasis of the Seas would be meaningless then? I am curious to why people keep referring then to the 'space ratio' component to justify a ship being crowded or not especially when so many are with 3-4 units difference?
Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
Fairsky
First Class Passenger
Member # 781

posted 02-18-2010 11:51 AM      Profile for Fairsky   Email Fairsky   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Fincantieri's president calls the new Princess ships "prototypes." Here's the full quote:

"Since these are prototypes," he said, "we hope that in the years to come they will be followed by a substantial number of ships of the same 'family.'"

What does that mean? A totally new design, or could a lengthened Grand-class also be considered a new hull and therefore a "prototype"?

BTW, space ratio really isn't as helpful as it used to be. Since ships started incorporating large open spaces (atriums, dinning rooms, etc.) it doesn't give you an accurate sense of congestion. Layout, flow, and space management is far more important.

A more helpful number would be based on the amount of public floor space on a ship divided by passenger capacity.


Posts: 1685 | From: Chicago, Illinois | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
Linerrich
First Class Passenger
Member # 4864

posted 02-18-2010 12:19 PM      Profile for Linerrich   Email Linerrich   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by dmwnc1:
So a 3-4 cubic foot per person difference between the new Princess ship, Freedom OTS, MSC Slendida, Celebrity Solstice, and the Oasis of the Seas would be meaningless then? I am curious to why people keep referring then to the 'space ratio' component to justify a ship being crowded or not especially when so many are with 3-4 units difference?

Exactly--space ratios become somewhat meaningless because the ship designs are not on a level playing field. RCI ships seem more spacious, but lots of that "extra" space per person is open atrium and dining room space, not really useable. "Useable" per person space, such as surface area, is not calculated.

Rich


Posts: 4210 | From: Miami, FL | Registered: Jul 2004  |  IP: Logged
Globaliser
First Class Passenger
Member # 4153

posted 02-18-2010 12:19 PM      Profile for Globaliser     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
[Sorry, duplicate.]

[ 02-18-2010: Message edited by: Globaliser ]


Posts: 1869 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2003  |  IP: Logged
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 02-18-2010 12:44 PM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Since the keel laying to Inaugural time frame is about 15 months I dont suspect we will see the first steel cut until Jan 2011? Wouldn't the blueprints already be done and approved since the first one is due out in 3 years? I wonder when we will see the first artist renditions?
Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
Globaliser
First Class Passenger
Member # 4153

posted 02-18-2010 12:48 PM      Profile for Globaliser     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I've sometimes mused about whether a floor area measurement might be a better guide to passenger space. But the huge atriums and vast soaring dining rooms do have an effect on passenger perception of space, and that would be completely ignored by a raw floor area calculation.

I wonder whether it might be more realistic if the space ratio was simply calculated on the basis of the ship volume that is used by passengers. To take an extreme example, an enclosed bridge wing adds to the GRT compared to an open bridge wing, but it does nothing whatsoever for the passenger experience. So if only passenger space was used in the calculation, that might be more realistic.

Of course, that comes with the complexity of defining and measuring the passenger space, so maybe it would be more hassle and cost than it's worth for the relatively slim marketing benefits. It seems that few passengers actually use the space ratio as any real guide.

[ 02-19-2010: Message edited by: Globaliser ]


Posts: 1869 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2003  |  IP: Logged
Ernst
First Class Passenger
Member # 5369

posted 02-18-2010 01:11 PM      Profile for Ernst   Author's Homepage   Email Ernst   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
There is even more to that.
First, it's difficult how to consider the areas not accessible by passengers. They do not contribute to the perception of size but of course, even the 'crew area' and certainly working areas are there for the benefit of the passengers.
Also, not the whole 'passenger area' is accessible to all passengers. Within the same space larger cabins mean less public rooms - and one has usually only one cabin so the space used for other cabins does not really contribute to the perception of size. On the other hand, passengers might tend to stay in their cabins more if they are larger which could result in less crowds.
So one could be lead to the conclusion to consider public rooms only as mentioned above. However, also there it's difficult to settle on a way to measure size.
There are rooms like restaurants or theaters which are used only infrequently and thus contribute less to the perception of size than rooms one walks trough several times a day. Also, it might not make much difference for the perception of size if a room is a bit wider or a bit more narrow - however, this might contribute quite a lot to the surface area or the volume.
Giving all that it's indeed senseless to come to any reasonable conclusions about how crowed or how spacious a ship is perceived based on the 'passenger space ratio'. This number might make sense in another context but for the passenger who books a cruise it's hardly of any use - especially when the numbers are 'close' like those compared above.

Posts: 9746 | From: Eindhoven | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
Malcolm @ cruisepage
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Member # 301

posted 02-18-2010 01:54 PM      Profile for Malcolm @ cruisepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
"In an interview with BBC Radio 2’s Jeremy Vine at The Travel Convention in Barcelona —Micky Arison said: “Queen Mary 2 (150,000 tons) is probably the biggest ship we will ever build. Carnival Dream at 130,000 tons is probably as large as we will build for Carnival. We built a ship of 116,000 tons (Ventura) for P&O Cruises and I have no intention of going bigger. I think at these sizes, we can deliver the right level of service and value.”"

Hmm...these two new ships will be joint second biggest he has built! How long before he exceeds 150,000 gt? Any bets?

QHow many grand class ships are their at present?

[ 02-18-2010: Message edited by: Malcolm @ cruisepage ]


Posts: 19210 | From: Essex (Just Outside London) | Registered: A Long Time Ago!  |  IP: Logged
Fairsky
First Class Passenger
Member # 781

posted 02-18-2010 02:06 PM      Profile for Fairsky   Email Fairsky   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Grand Class:

Grand
Star
Golden

Diamond
Sapphire

Caribbean
Crown
Emerald
Ruby

Ventura
Azura

11 total (plus the 2 Newbuilds just ordered)


Posts: 1685 | From: Chicago, Illinois | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
Ernst
First Class Passenger
Member # 5369

posted 02-18-2010 02:09 PM      Profile for Ernst   Author's Homepage   Email Ernst   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Malcolm @ cruisepage:
"In an interview with BBC Radio 2’s Jeremy Vine at The Travel Convention in Barcelona —Micky Arison said: “Queen Mary 2 (150,000 tons) is probably the biggest ship we will ever build. Carnival Dream at 130,000 tons is probably as large as we will build for Carnival. We built a ship of 116,000 tons (Ventura) for P&O Cruises and I have no intention of going bigger. I think at these sizes, we can deliver the right level of service and value.”"

Hmm...these two new ships will be joint second biggest he has built! How long before he exceeds 150,000 gt? Any bets?

QHow many grand class ships are their at present?


Beside that this statement must be about two years old: The new ships ordered are no contradiction to what Mr. Arison said.


Posts: 9746 | From: Eindhoven | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
Ernst
First Class Passenger
Member # 5369

posted 02-18-2010 02:16 PM      Profile for Ernst   Author's Homepage   Email Ernst   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Fairsky:
Grand Class:

Grand
Star
Golden

Diamond
Sapphire

Caribbean
Crown
Emerald
Ruby

Ventura
Azura

11 total (plus the 2 Newbuilds just ordered)


Do Diamond Princess and Sapphire Princess really count as 'Grand Class'? Of course, strictly speaking the Fincantieri built ships are not all sister ships either (but certainly very similar and from the same 'series').


Posts: 9746 | From: Eindhoven | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
dmwnc1
Cruise Director
Member # 3785

posted 02-18-2010 02:21 PM      Profile for dmwnc1   Email dmwnc1   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Ernst:
Do Diamond Princess and Sapphire Princess really count as 'Grand Class'? Of course, strictly speaking the Fincantieri built ships are not all sister ships either (but certainly very similar and from the same 'series').

Good point. There are slight external design differences.

Royal Caribbean has 8 Voyager/Freedom-Class ships.


Posts: 5650 | From: Clarksburg WV | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged

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