Carnival Vista wears its innovations well

The patio of a Havana Cabana suite includes a swing chair. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
The patio of a Havana Cabana suite includes a swing chair. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

 

The Carnival Vista, four years in the making, is distinguished by a number of new features that seem so right on a cruise ship, you wonder why no one thought of them before.

At least three stand out in my mind as concepts that work intuitively to enhance a cruise.

The one that will send a lot of photos out onto social networks is SkyRide, the recumbent bicycle that riders propel beneath an 800-foot-long track suspended 150 feet above the waterline.

SkyRide is just fun, the heart of the Carnival brand promise. It lasts about 90 seconds at normal pace and riders can reach speeds of 18 miles an hour if they pedal hard.

The dual track on SkyRide allows for companions to cycle together or friends to race the 800-foot circuit. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
The dual track on SkyRide allows for companions to cycle together or friends to race the 800-foot circuit. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

“It was excellent,” said Spencer Clarke, a film producer and director from Los Angeles who tried SkyRide on a recent cruise from Barcelona. “I liked the fact that it gave you a little bit of that weightless feeling as you come down that incline,” he said.

Although its appeal to kids is obvious, Carnival said its oldest rider on a recent cruise was 87.

Wait times on a recent cruise peaked at 35-40 minutes, but that may grow as more children board during the summer months.

Then there is the Family Harbor: a class of cabins grouped around a key-carded lounge for families. The concept is so functional, it’s hard to believe no one has tried it before.

The Family Harbor Lounge is surrounded by family-friendly cabins and access is controlled by key card. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
The Family Harbor Lounge is surrounded by family-friendly cabins and access is controlled by key card. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

Some family cabins are designed with a bed nook and TV that can be curtained off from the rest of the cabin, which both kids and parents will find a cool idea for different reasons.

In addition to a unified nautical design theme, the cabins come with perks such as free meals for kids at most specialty restaurants and a night of free babysitting.

Alex Aguilar, of Orange County, Calif., said she expects to use the Family Harbor Lounge two or three times a day.

“I’m genuinely excited there’s milk,” she said. “And the fact I can just run out here and get it is great.”

Dreamscape is a central pillar in the atrium that projects moving images through LED technology. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
Dreamscape is a central pillar in the atrium that projects moving images through LED technology. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

Bringing IMAX to sea also seems a no-brainer, if a little complicated to execute. Carnival has taken a three-deck space in the interior to put 178 raked seats in front of the enormous IMAX screen.

To install the screen without damage, IMAX had to roll it up and thread it through a three foot hole in the side of the theater.

“It was an incredible challenge,” said IMAX Corp. chief executive Rich Gelfond.

Programming includes documentaries ($5.50), and 3-D family features and current Hollywood blockbusters ($12.95), which by the third quarter will be delivered digitally by satellite at the same time that they open in 1,100 IMAX land theaters.

The Vista has other innovations that merit high grades. Visitors gawk at Dreamscape, a multi-story mushroom-shaped pillar that is programmed with ever-changing images crafted in LED lights.

The Vista’s photo gallery is the first end-to-end digital gallery on Carnival. Photos display on a video wall and are available for purchase on a guest’s hand-held device through the Carnival Hub app.

Light fixtures that look like rocket nozzles are part of the design scheme for Carnival Vista. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
Light fixtures that look like rocket nozzles are part of the design scheme for Carnival Vista.Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

Another winning space on the ship is the Cuban-themed complex on Deck 5 aft. Havana Bar has been upgraded from the Carnival Sunshine to have more seating, a better bandstand/dance floor, and better theming, including dominos tables and a colonial map of Cuba on the wall.

It extends outdoor to an aft pool area, and is surrounded by Cuban-themed cabins and suites. The latter come with open air patios that connect via a deck walk to the pool. The whole outdoor area is private to Havana cabin guests from 6 am to 5 pm, giving it a club atmosphere.

I didn’t catch all of the entertainment, but more than ever before Carnival is taking musicians and dispatching them to parts of the ship you don’t expect to see them in. Examples include a strolling accordion player and a New Orleans jazz trio stationed at the entrance to one of the main dining rooms.

The stateroom corridors on Carnival Vista feature floor-to-ceiling photo panels. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
The stateroom corridors on Carnival Vista feature floor-to-ceiling photo panels. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

For my money, the Vista’s design is the most elegant ever for a Carnival ship. I particularly liked the orange light fixtures that look like rocket nozzles and give the ship a lot of visual thrust.

Another neat trick is the use of floor to ceiling photo panels in the stateroom corridors, which make the cabin doors almost disappear and keep the corridors from being visual dead zones.

A few things about the Vista were disappointing, puzzling, or didn’t work.

Not building USB charging outlets next to the beds is a missed opportunity on any new cruise ship. The Vista doesn’t have them.

There are odd changes of elevation of an inch or two in some stateroom corridors that could catch walkers by surprise.

An eye-catching hammock in the renderings of the Havana Cabana suite patio has turned into a swing chair because there wasn’t adequate space for a full-body hammock, Carnival officials said.

The Pixels photo gallery is the first end-to-end digital gallery in the Carnival Cruise Line fleet. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
The Pixels photo gallery is the first end-to-end digital gallery in the Carnival Cruise Line fleet.Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

The otherwise appealing Lido Marketplace buffet can feel overcrowded at breakfast, and the excursion staging areas at times are overwhelmed, resulting in long lines.

The new a la carte Seafood Shack seemed expensive to me, compared to the great value Carnival delivers in other specialty restaurants, and I wasn’t bowled over by a lobster roll I had there.

Robin Reed, a property manager from the Bronx who was dining on the $6 fish and chips, said they were fine, but that snow crab legs a companion ordered “weren’t really seasoned.”

“The prices are not bad compared to what you get someplace else,” Reed said.

There were a few things I didn’t get to try but that sounded intriguing: “Clue,” a murder mystery game, and “Lights. Camera. Interaction,” described as “Movie-oke” in which passengers re-enact scenes from famous movies.

Carnival on the right track with SkyRide

SkyRide vehicles travel on a track 150 feet above the water. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

SkyRide vehicles travel on a track 150 feet above the water. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
 

ABOARD THE CARNIVAL VISTA — If Royal Caribbean International is known for its rock climbing wall, and Norwegian Cruise Line for its over-the-edge walking plank, Carnival Cruise Line has been known for its waterslides.

Well, there’s a new top-deck attraction on Carnival’s latest ship, Carnival Vista, and it will give waterslides a run for their money.

The SkyRide is a recumbent bicycle wrapped in an aerodynamic shell and suspended beneath a metal track held by steel struts two stories above the ship’s 12th deck.

I had been eager to try it ever since Carnival unveiled the conceptual renderings. I’m happy to say it is as much fun as it looks like in the drawings.

My first ride was in Barcelona while the ship was still in port. My strategy was to beat the crowd. I only had to wait in line for six or eight other riders before I got my turn.

I strapped into a safety harness that’s attached with a clip to the back of the vehicle shell. The seat is surrounded by a circular opening. I crouched, sat down and put my feet up on the pedals in front of me.

The ride attendant helped me adjust the seat to the proper distance for my legs, and I was off.

Within a couple of pedal rotations, the floor of the transit station fell away and I was whirring through the air 150 feet above the waterline. It was a fine sunny day in Barcelona and the view was truly a birds-eye one. Seagulls were flying at the same level I was.

Toward center city Barcelona, I could see the beginnings of La Rambla, the city’s famed boulevard, several miles away. Out to sea, tankers and freighters rested at anchor below me.

There are dual tracks, so you can ride with a companion or race a friend. The second rider was well behind me, so I was all alone up in the sky. I felt free as a bird.

Pedaling the SkyRide is like riding a bike without having to balance. It is easy. I really enjoyed the sense, however, that I had to do a little work to get myself around the track. It wouldn’t be as much fun if it was electrically powered.

Ben Kolbel, 10, gets ready for his trip on SkyRide. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst
Ben Kolbel, 10, gets ready for his trip on SkyRide. Photo Credit: Tom Stieghorst

The track is an elongated rectangle that runs about a third of the length of the ship — 800 feet in total. As I approached the second turn, I hit the section where it declines about two feet and picked up speed.

I had been instructed to use the brake going into the turn. I coasted instead, and as I rounded the bend, I imagined pedaling into the turn would give the vehicle a fun/scary swing outward. Overall, SkyRide is tame enough, but this was the one thrilling moment when I felt as if I might go straight off the back of the ship.

The corresponding section of track on the return has an incline of a foot or two, which took about 10% of extra pedal power to master. From there it was a matter of how quickly I wanted the ride to be over.

I didn’t want it to be over, so I slowed my pace, leisurely enjoying the view from the top of the aptly named Vista.

One of the strongest selling points for the SkyRide is that it should appeal to a broad range of users. It goes without saying kids will love it, but any reasonably agile adult will, too, with the possible exception of someone with an intense fear of heights.

I found SkyRide to be one of the most enjoyable things I’ve done on a cruise ship. Some cruise ship innovations are one-and-done for me, but I could go on the SkyRide repeatedly, and even pick a ship based on having it.

The only thing that can stop SkyRide is the weather.  A late-afternoon shower in Barcelona shut it down, and winds the next day exceeded the 45 mph safety ceiling, so it was closed.

But as soon as I get a chance, I want to take another spin, this time with the ship moving forward and the sea rolling beneath me. I can’t wait to experience what that feels like.

Thomson Purchase QE2 From Cunard

QE2 Left to rust in Dubai

The www.CRUISE.co.uk team can exclusively reveal that the Queen Elizabeth 2 (the famous former flagship of Cunard) is set to be bought by Thomson Cruises.

The QE2 (as she is known) is currently floating in Dubai and her lease expires in November this year.

She left the Cunard fleet in 2008 and was previously bought by a company that intended to turn her into a hotel. She has since been left to rust in Dubai and there had been rumours she would be scrapped after pictures emerged of the disrepair she was falling into.

However, Thomson Cruises have announced that they will be purchasing her once her lease is up.

Helen Caron, Managing Director of Thomson Cruises said: “We are excited to have another new ship join our fantastic fleet. Passengers have already told us how excited they are for our newest ship [the Thomson Discovery] and they now have another new launch to look forward to.

“We will be making adaptations to increase the family friendly aspect of the QE2 and look forward to introducing families, couples and cruisers from all walks of life to a true ocean liner.”

It has not yet been revealed what these adaptations may be, but the ship can currently accommodate 1,892 passengers and 1,040 crew. There are five restaurants, two cafes, three swimming pools, a cinema and a casino.

It has also been rumoured that the ship will be called the Thomson Triumph but this has not yet been confirmed by the cruise line.

Traditionally the QE2 has made transatlantic sailings, however it seems likely that she could be sailing on Mediterranean itineraries once under Thomson’s control.