Assembling the Anthem

Dispatch, Meyer Werft shipyard: Assembling the Anthem

By Tom Stieghorst
Tom StieghorstTravel Weekly Cruise editor Tom Stieghorst is on a tour of the Meyer Werft shipyard where Royal Caribbean’s Quantum of the Seas, about two months from completion, is getting the finishing touches prior to its launch in November in New York. Read his dispatch here.

PAPENBURG, Germany — Imagine putting together a jigsaw puzzle five football fields long and 25 stories high.

That’s the impression generated by a trip through the assembly shed here at the Meyer Werft shipyard.

Anthem of the Seas under constructionAt the moment, the Royal Caribbean International ship Anthem of the Seas is the project that occupies most of the sprawling 450,000 square meters of enclosed space at the yard.

The complexity of the task is mind-boggling.

On a tour for media and a small group of travel agents put together by Royal Caribbean, we got to see firsthand how a ship is transformed from a pile of steel plates into a fully formed vessel.

The early stages involve cutting and welding thousands of plates together into sections, which in turn are welded together into blocks to form the ship. For each massive 30-by-30-foot section, pipes and ducts are added to the ceiling while the section sits upside down, which is easier than working overhead. The sections then are flipped over into proper position by overhead cranes.

Workers can finish about 25 sections a week, with 100 employees working three shifts a day. The process is speeded along by cuts preprogrammed into robotic lasers.

Once the sections are joined, they move into the massive block-assembly hall. Meyer Werft is the only cruise yard that builds its ship indoors. Managers believe that NASA’s space shuttle is the only vehicle built indoors that can rival a cruise ship in size.

Anthem of the Seas under constructionAbout 60 blocks go into a ship the size of the Anthem. Once the blocks are built, it is easier to see how the parts will fit together as a whole. The bow and stern are especially recognizable, as is the ship’s bridge. The ship’s name is discernable in raised letters on the side and rear.

The giant, 300-ton blocks are built wherever there’s space. Later, huge overhead traveling cranes will lift each block into its proper position to give the ship its overall structure.

Along the way, 2,090 prefabricated cabins will be trucked from a nearby factory and bolted into place.

When that is done, the basin of the assembly shed is flooded and the ship is floated outdoors for interior fitting so that work can begin indoors on the next ship. The Anthem’s sister ship Quantum of the Seas was floated out of the building two weeks ago and is being prepped for delivery in November.

In final form, each 16-deck ship will measure 1,141 feet in length and 136 feet in width. In all of its complexity, the construction of a ship such as the Anthem takes less than a year and a half. The first steel for it was cut in August 2013; the ship is expected to be ready for guests in April.

Quantum to use wrist bands instead of key cards

By Tom Stieghorst

Guests on Royal Caribbean International’s Quantum of the Seas will be issued wristbands with radio frequency identification (RFID) chips in place of the standard issue key cards, which will be used for cabin access, payment and other traditional key card functions.

The wristbands can also be used to navigate the ship, said Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. Chairman Richard Fain, who hosted a live webcast from the ship’s construction site in Germany to announce the innovation.

The webcast will include a chat with former New York Times technology columnist David Pogue, who now works for Yahoo! Those interested can ask questions via Twitter under the hashtag #QuantumoftheSeas.

It was one of half a dozen technology upgrades on the Quantum that promise to make cruising simpler, easier and more hassle-free, Fain said.

Another eye-catching technology will be a robotic bartender which will tend a new venue, the Bionic Bar. Guests will place orders via tablets and then watch the robotic bartenders mix their cocktails.

Quantum will also use RFID to enable guests to track their baggage in real time after they drop it off before the cruise, and after they deliver it to housekeeping on departing the ship. In addition, guests will be able to generate their boarding documents online and upload a photo ID to get digital boarding credentials that will shorten the check-in process. Fain said the process will go from sidewalk to ship in 10 minutes and eliminate the traditional check-in counter and the associated lines.

Quantum is also scheduled to be the second ship to fully utilize the O3B satellite system for telecommunications access, which is expected to dramatically increase Internet speeds. The extra connectivity will enable the Quantum to offer a live global video gaming suite in its new SeaPlex activities area.

The O3B system has been in testing on the Oasis of the Seas and is expected to be fully deployed first on the Allure of the Seas by October.

Royal Caribbean claims record check-in times for Quantum ships

Royal Caribbean claims record check-in times for Quantum shipsRoyal Caribbean has claimed it will boast record check-in times thanks to technology advances due to be released for new ship Quantum of the Seas.

The line is claiming guests will be able to board the ship in 10 minutes by removing check-in counters, form-filling and queues. Instead, guests will have been able to generate boarding documents online, upload their photo ID and receive digital boarding credentials ahead of departure. They will also be able to track their luggage on their smartphones.

The enhanced check-in process is one of a raft of ‘firsts’ claimed by Royal Caribbean for Quantum of the Seas, which launches in October, and future Quantum-class ships.

Other technical innovations include new ‘WOWband wristbands’ to help guests navigate the ship, make onboard purchases and serve as their room key, two new apps to allow guests to plan and book experiences before and during their sailing, and robotic bartenders which will mix cocktails automatically in a new ‘Bionic Bar’.

Ben Bouldin, director of sales UK and Ireland, said: “Royal Caribbean International is renowned for innovation and bold developments that no one else in the holiday industry – let alone cruise sector – can deliver, whether it be real-time luggage tracking, robot bartenders or Roboscreens.

“We are confident that once agents give potential holidaymakers a look at the world’s most technologically advanced ship, bringing in the bookings will be plain sailing with excited consumers eager to take a Quantum leap forward in their holidays.”