cruise ship passed ‘dangerously close to shore

Fury of Venetians after 110,000-ton cruise ship passed ‘dangerously close to shore to perform salute to company shareholder’

By HANNAH ROBERTS

PUBLISHED: 18:26, 28 July 2013 | UPDATED: 19:23, 28 July 2013

  • Carnival Sunshine appears to pass within 20m of city’s fragile shoreline
  • Liner is owned by the same parent company of the Costa Concordia
  • Ship botched its manoeuvre, witnesses claim, squeezing other boats

 

Ventians have reacted with fury after a cruise ship allegedly passed within yards of the city’s historic banks while performing ‘a salute’ to a major company shareholder.

Film footage of the Carnival Sunshine, which is owned by the same parent company as the notorious Costa Concordia, appears to show the 110,000-ton liner passing within 20 metres of the city’s fragile shoreline.

The ship botched its manoeuvre, squeezing a vaporetto water taxi and other boats between the ship and the bank, witnesses claimed.

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People in Venice have reacted with fury to footage showing a cruise ship which appears to pass within yards of the city's fragile shorelinePeople in Venice have reacted with fury to footage showing a cruise ship which appears to pass within yards of the city’s fragile shoreline – and show a water taxi, circled, squeezed between the liner and the bank

At the time of the incident an 150ft super yacht belonging to former Carnival CEO and major shareholder Mickey Arison was moored on the same part of the shoreline, the local newspaper Nuova Venezia reported, fuelling rumours that the manoeuvre was an in fact a sail-by salute.

The incident raises the spectre of the Costa Concordia cruise ship, which sank after hitting rocks off the coast of Tuscany during just such a salute to the island of Giglio last year.

 

 

 

 

Writer Roberto Ferrucci, who filmed the exercise, told the Italian news agency ANSA: ‘I was sitting at the café reading on the bank, as I often do, when I saw the ship tailing.

Rather than moving towards the centre of the channel it almost brushed the shore causing a vaporetto to get caught dangerously between the ship and the bank. It was shocking.’

Carnival have denied any wrongdoing saying it was ‘a safe transit’.

Witnesses claimed that the Carnival Sunshine botched its maneouvre as it sailed in the Venetian watersWitnesses claimed that the Carnival Sunshine botched its maneouvre as it sailed in the Venetian waters

 

Writer Roberto Ferrucci filmed the ship from a vantage point at a cafeWriter Roberto Ferrucci filmed the ship from a vantage point at a cafe and called the move ‘shocking’

But Venice’s proud residents are already up in arms about the presence of large cruise ships passing through the lagoon, with protesters last month calling for a ban on all those that pass by St Mark’s Cathedral.

The committee of the No to Big Ships group denounced the latest incident as ‘reckless’.

A statement said: ‘The reckless manoeuvre or error destroys the argument that an accident in St Mark’s basin is impossible.’

Local councillor Beppe Caccia tweeted ‘Shame on you Mr Mickey Arson, Sunshine putting Venice at risk.’

A 150ft super-yacht belonging to major shareholder Mickey Arson was moored on the same part of the shoreline, sparking rumours that the Sunshine had performed a 'sail-salute'A 150ft super-yacht belonging to major shareholder Mickey Arson was moored on the same part of the shoreline, sparking rumours that the Sunshine had performed a ‘sail-salute’

Environmental group Codacons called for port authorities to seize the ship pending an investigation by prosecutors.

Andrea Orlando, minister for the environment, said that the number of ships must be reduced.

This episode ‘confirms the high risk we are taking,’ he said.

A statement from the cruise company said: ‘Carnival intends to prove that the few metres claimed by the witness are in fact 72 metres and that the brush is no more than a safe transit carried out in accordance with the rules of transit.’

A spokesman said reports of a ‘salute’ were ‘unfounded’.

‘The passage through the Venice Lagoon occurred in full compliance with navigational regulations and well within the accepted parameters for distance from shore,’ the spokesman said.

‘The Carnival Sunshine passed more than 70 metres from Riva dei Sette Martiri on the planned route. The distance from shore has been confirmed by the Coast Guard, the local pilot association and Carnival Cruise Lines.’

P&O Cruises has designs on Britain’s biggest and best cruise ship

Special Report: P&O Cruises has designs on Britain’s biggest and best cruise ship

By Lee Hayhurst

A London-based agency behind some of the world’s most iconic hotels will oversee the cruise line’s new superliner. Lee Hayhurst found out more at last week’s keel laying in Italy

P&O Cruises has broken with tradition and employed a single design team from outside the cruise industry to oversee the development of its next ship.

The UK’s leading cruise operator said its decision to appoint London-based Richmond, a design agency for hotels, reflected its desire to come up with a new concept for a cruise ship.

Traditionally, separate design teams are allocated specific areas of ships, but P&O said it wanted to ensure the as-yet unnamed ship has a better flow.

Carol Marlow, managing director of P&O Cruises, said she had used hotel designers when she worked for Swan Hellenic to create a country club feel.

P&O Cruises is aiming for a contemporary British feel for its new 3,600-passenger ship, the biggest ever built for the UK market and due to enter service in 2015.

Richmond, which has 45 years’ experience of designing hotels, has worked on properties including Four Seasons Baku, InterContinental Park Lane and Langham hotels in London and Chicago.

Richmond’s introduction to cruise came when its spa at the Four Seasons in Hampshire was spotted by a Carnival executive and it was asked to design the spa for Princess Cruises’ Royal Princess.

“We wanted a design very much with British people in mind who have never been on a cruise before,” said Marlow.

“We hope this ship will bring in these types of people. British tastes are moving forward and we are trying to anticipate the future.”

An agent’s view

Leading agency Bolsover Cruise Club will keep its customers up to date on progress through its own blog on its recently relaunched website.

Marketing assistant Katie Anderson, who was attending her first keel laying, said clients will be sent e-shots, including blog posts, to build anticipation.

“We are already getting good engagement on our blog and have been focusing on our existing database but we have noticed a lot more new-to-cruise customers as well.”

 

We’ll be introducing British style, says ship’s architect

Compared to designing and building hotels, cruise ships like P&O Cruises’ new vessel are built at an incredibly fast rate, chief architect Terry McGillicuddy said.

The enormous drydock in the Fincantieri shipyard near Trieste was largely empty after the keel laying last week apart from the 500-ton chunk of metal that was ceremoniously lowered in. But within just two years, the ship will be cruising the world’s oceans.

“Very rarely can we get a hotel finished in two years, it’s usually four or five,” said McGillicuddy, director of London-based design agency Richmond.

“A ship is a huge build. There are a lot of food, beverage and entertainment areas that a hotel does not have.

“P&O was looking for overall designs throughout the ship to be up to date, and different from ships they have now that have rooms that are individually designed and do not really flow.

“The fact we are a British firm was really important; we will be introducing some British style.”

McGillicuddy said most of the initial design work was completed, with only details of the open deck area to be finalised.

P&O Cruises will be releasing details to build interest in the ship as construction continues.

Cruise ship runs aground in Scotland

Cruise ship runs aground in Scotland

By Phil Davies

Cruise ship runs aground in ScotlandA small cruise ship ran aground in Oban Bay in Scotland yesterday evening.

The MS Serenissima, which was recently refurbished and is under charter to Noble Caledonia, is reported to have 112 people on board.

No-one was believed to have been injured in the incident.

The vessel was refloated in the early hours of this morning after it ran aground in Oban Bay. Divers will carry out underwater surveys of the vessel to ensure its seaworthiness.

An initial attempt to refloat the ship using its own engine, with a lifeboat pulling from astern, failed because of strong winds blowing the ship towards the shore.

High tide was not due until around midnight but it was hoped to tow the vessel off around 10.30pm.

An RNLI spokesman told the BBC last night: “The vessel is currently aground at the bow but still afloat at the stern.

“The initial attempt at refloating the ship used its own engine with the lifeboat providing assistance by pulling at the stern.

“Unfortunately this attempt was hampered by a strong wind blowing the ship towards the shore, and was unsuccessful.

“The lifeboat is now working with the crew of the ship to refloat it at a higher state of tide.”

The local Oban Times newspaper reported: “It would appear that the 87-metre MS Serenissima went the wrong way round a navigation buoy, as she encountered the MV Isle of Mull ferry, when she entered Oban Bay in Argyll from the north.”

The vessel was completing an 11-day ‘Great Gardens and Houses of Britain and Ireland” itinerary which left Poole on May 11.

The ship, which previously operated for Hurtigruten on Norwegian coastal voyages as the Harald Jarl, is scheduled to depart from Oban today (Tuesday) on a seven-night Hebridean cruise, according to Noble Caledonia’s 2013-14 Small Ship Cruising in Britain and Ireland brochure.