Showing posts with label Meyer Werft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meyer Werft. Show all posts
18 December 2015
NORWEGIAN ESCAPE 25th October 2015 Part 3
Sunday 25th October 2015
I woke and realised it was 'new ship day' today - what fun. Breakfast in the Hotel reception area was far less crowded than expected, probably because it was Sunday morning! I admired the blazing log fire on the huge television screen as I passed it.
Log fire on the TV
Soon it was time to get a taxi to the new cruise ship terminal at Cruise Center Steinwerder (CC3) Buchheisterstrasse 16, 20457 Hamburg. We could see that a ferry pier was under construction in the barren area near the cruise terminal, so I imagine that will be very welcome for some people.
The sight of our ship was a welcome sight under a blue sky. We had admired the hull art on Friday and now we were about to board and sail on her. The ship has a gross tonnage of 165,157 and is the first ship in NCL's Breakaway-Plus Class, built by Meyer Werft. She has 5 exhaust emission treatment units, which are known as scrubbers. She will carry 4,268 passengers (double occupancy) and a crew of 1,370. We were told the highlights are: 28 dining options, 21 bars and lounges, 24-hour room service, Tradewinds Tax-& Duty-Free shops, Spa and Salon, Fitness Center, Aqua Park, Three-Storey Sports Complex, Internet Cafe, Entourage Teen Club, Splash Academy Youth Center, Guppies Nursery. Cabins will include 55 suites in the private section The Haven, and there is the Studio area with 82 cabins designed for passengers travelling solo. I had booked in one of these, but when recently notified of my cabin number I discovered I had been 'upgraded' to an inside twin; ah well, that's fine, and I shall look forward to a Studio cabin for my one night out of Southampton.
A friend's photograph
Artwork
Once in the terminal we were told that there were no luggage labels available and we would all have to take our own luggage with us to our cabins, contrary to what we had been told by NCL. No wonder people were sitting around, watching large amounts of personal luggage. I presume lots of passengers were on a back-to-back two or three cruises, and sailing to Southampton and then to Miami. I was so glad I had my usual small pull-along case.
Another friend came to join us, newly off the plane from Heathrow, and we were soon able to check in and get our cabin cards. I had booked a Studio cabin my upgrademput me in a twin inside up on deck 14. I'm sure they are perfectly fine for many people, but I was really looking forward to one with so much more light. Studio cabins are ideal for inside single use, especially as they are always located with a dedicated Studio Lounge nearby. We boarded the ship and left our bags in our cabins. That done, we could head for the top decks to start looking around.
Inaugural Cruise notice, on all the screens on board
Life ring
The Haven
Barren land around the terminal
Top deck 20 is the Sun deck forward, and deck 19 forward is exclusive for The Haven guests, with their own Restaurant on deck 18 and Lounge and Courtyard just below on deck 17. On this deck midships is the walking track, sun deck and waves pool bar. Aft of this is the sports court, zip line, sun deck, miniature golf, ropes, and below that is where we went for lunch, at Margaritaville at Sea. It had waiter service from a good menu, but we could imagine this being an extra charge venue at some future stage. After this we continued our walk along the deck until we came to the Dolce Gelato and decided it was the right time for an ice-cream.
Down on deck 16 aft is the Garden Cafe, which NCL chooses to call 'complimentary dining'. No, we thought, it is not complimentary as we have all paid for this in our fare price. Forward of this is the Garden Cafe Bar, Aqua Park, Market Place, Waves pool bar, pools and sun deck.
Cabins are on lower decks with all the other public rooms and restaurants on decks 6, 7 and 8. I had read that there are 28 dining options on board. The tinies on board have Guppies Playroom and Nursery down on deck 5.
At home recently I had an e-mail from friends in Hamburg saying they would be sailing on this trip from Hamburg to Southampton, so we arranged to meet up on board. They then said they would be sailing on the Friday party night for agents from Hamburg so we thought we had missed them; we had unknowingly waved them off from the port! In fact they were still on board and left a message with a cabin number so we were able to arrange to meet up for departure at 7 p.m.
Lifeboat drill was at 4.30 p.m., with no need to take actual life jackets, and then there was time to unpack and keep the next arrangement. We met and went to the empty 5 o'clock Somewhere Bar hoping for a fruit juice or tea, only to discover that it was alcohol only in there. The room was empty, and had no inviting appeal to us. We then headed for the Atrium Bar and I had a pot of tea there. We all like these very sociable areas on the ship, which are always full of passengers and often music too.
NCL funnel logo
The Grotto
Deck screen
Part of the main dining room
Dining table
Landing stage under construction
Atrium
The staircases
The Five o'clock Somewhere Bar table
Inside the bar
I really liked and admired this piece of artwork
Part of the Skyline Bar and Lounge
If bored at the Bar...
They look familiar
Lower floor of the main dining room
More art work
Art work
Now it's pink
Art work at the bottom of one of the staircases
On Deck
This was Sailaway time on deck
Time then to put on the warm clothing ready to get up on deck for 7 p.m. departure. It was dark of course, and not very warm, but the ship's ropes were removed and we gently sailed away from the quayside. There were no spectators other than a few cars on a nearby lane so we made a very unspectacular and underwhelming departure from a very obscure part of this wonderful port of Hamburg. There were one or two lights from people waving from the side of the River Elbe as we sailed towards the sea, but that was all. The ship is to be based in the Eastern Caribbean in future so will almost certainly not be seen here again, but we are now sailing on the Inaugural Cruise of the good ship NORWEGIAN ESCAPE and that is exciting.
We have a dinner booking at the deck 8 Bayamo Restaurant at 7.30 so we hurried to prepare for that. This is a Specialty Dining Room with cover charge, located on the Waterfront area on Deck 8. The service was good and my diary notes that the food was simply OK. My two friends, who know far more about good food on ships than I do, also said it was not memorable.
We had booked - without charge - for the evening's entertainment. Called 'After Midnight', it rather disconcertingly started at 10 p.m. In fact, the show was based on slow music and songs from the 1930s in Harlem, America, and was skilfully done but was perhaps not to everyone's taste. Lots of people in the vast audience were asleep, I noticed. Well, that takes less effort than walking out...
Back in my comfortable cabin I found a notice telling me that the clocks were going back tonight, so that was an unexpected piece of good news. Outside it was raining hard but inside the ship it was snug and warm and tomorrow we all have a day at sea. In my brand-new ship's cabin I had a brand-new bed, mattress and linen etc. so all was extremely well with my world.
To be continued...
Labels:
Hamburg,
Meyer Werft,
Norwegian Escape
01 November 2015
MEIN SCHIFF 4, 7th September 2015, Part 4
Monday 7th September 2015
An early alarm call meant shower, breakfast and checkout from Stella Maris could be done calmly and we were soon on our way to Hamburg's Central Station, ready to meet up with our fellow travellers and get the train to Kiel. MEIN SCHIFF 4 will be sailing from that port this evening and we wanted to enjoy the time before we needed to board the ship. The 10.24 train from Hamburg Central took us in just over an hour to Kiel, where we made our way out of the big station and headed the few yards towards the water of Kiel Haven.
Hamburg to Kiel
Kiel Haven
Kiel station
Outside Vapiano
Inside Vapiano
Lady with a little dog - dog being hugged by a member of the public!
Restaurant Vapiano offered its usual delightful variety of food, and we were soon established there. We planned to catch a local ferry up two stops, then get another ferry back one stop, and from there we could walk a short distance to board the TUI ship. It's fun to arrive somewhere by sea.
Ferry timetable
Our route and stops
Our route today
On board Laboe
Laboe
Bulk and Kitzeberg near where we boarded Laboe
Stena Germanica
Color Fantasy
A submarine in the shipyard
The stern of Mein Schiff 4
Mein Schiff 4 near a Costa ship
Costa Pacifica and Mein Schiff 4 at Kiel
Victoria Seaways
Heikendorf
Color Fantasy sailing from Kiel
Schwentine nearby
Mein Schiff 4
The local ferry LABOE took us up the waterway two stops to Reventlou, and shortly afterwards another local ferry HEIKENDORF brought us back one stop to Seegarten; our luggage was soon handed over outside the terminal building and we could join the queue to check in. That was all good fun, even before we boarded the cruise ship!
During the short ferry sailings we had been able to see the other ships in port today, including the COSTA PACIFICA, and the two big tug tenders BULK and KITZEBERG, but of course we were really happy to be able to photograph MEIN SCHIFF 4 from the water.
The check in took some time and, even though the UK is not in Schengen, we still had to hand over our British passports for safekeeping until we disembarked back in Hamburg. Once on board we went to our respective cabins and then met for a cup of tea in the Tag & Nacht (Day & Night) Bistro. My friends had all travelled on a MEIN SCHIFF ship before, so knew what to find and expect around the vessel, but it took me a little while to adjust. I had an inside double cabin for single use, which was a rarity apparently, and was happy with being forward on Deck 10. My daily programme told me that the Captain was Kapitan Todd Burgman.
Public rooms are on Decks 3, 4 and 5, with cabins on Decks 6-11; outside pools, bars and lounges are on Deck 12; there is no Deck 13; Deck 14 has suites, kids club, indoor cycling and other bars and lounges; Deck 15 has the sun deck, plus massage facilities.
MEIN SCHIFF 4 was built in the Meyer Werft shipyard in Turku, Finland, in 2014, for TUI Cruises, which is one of the largest holiday companies in the world. She was floated out on 10th October 2014, and delivered in May 2015 for a naming ceremony in Kiel, which is to be her home port for the 2015 summer. She is 99,430 gross tons, carries a Maltese flag, with a home port shown as Valletta, Malta. She can carry 2790 passengers, with 1030 crew. Her first cruise began on 6th June 2015 so on board she is very new to us boarding her just 3 months later. We will be able to use 11 restaurants including a Surf & Turf Restaurant, Mediterranean and Japanese venues. The line caters to Germans and German is the primary language on board, but our group of 7 were not the only non-Germans on board. I had been told that MEIN SCHIFF 4 (meaning My Ship 4) is part of the fleet offering a casual premium product to the German cruise market, with all-inclusive cruises.
A colour wall
Eye-catching details as I went to my cabin
Theatre
Theatre
Deck 5
Deck 10
Cabin 10036, a double for single use
Artwork in my cabin
A 4-funnel ship with all 4 funnels smoking? Lusitania? On a German ship in 2015 as a piece of artwork?
Uncomfortable backless seating
Part of the delightful TUI Bar Lounge
I liked this
On deck pre-sailing
In the late afternoon sunshine we could see a large vessel being built in the German Naval Yards across the water of the Kiel Haven. It already had two very tall masts and I later discovered it would be the world's biggest sailing yacht, with three masts, built at a cost of £260 million. It is said to be 468 feet long and will have 300 feet masts, plus an underwater observatory, for Russian industrialist owner Andrey Melnichenko and his wife. The vessel, SAILING YACHT, will start sea trials in a couple of weeks time.
2 masts already on the big yacht being built
Stena Germanica sailing
Botnia Seaways sailing away
We could also watch STENA GERMANICA sail away, and then watch BOTNIA SEAWAYS of DFDS sail from the port of Kiel. I remember standing on the port side of the deck 10 and choosing to stand on the small glass panel on the deck below my feet - I could look down at people on deck 5 I think, a long way down...
As I made my way to my muster station for lifeboat drill I passed a huge model of the ship, with part of one side cutaway - that is always fun to see. The drill was conducted in German of course but on the large screens showing the particular instructions at every muster station I was pleased to see English translations at the bottom of every screen. I thought it was one of the most comprehensive drills I have ever attended.
Ship model
As I prepared for dinner I looked at the artwork in my cabin, and was surprised to see a picture of what looked like the LUSITANIA, with all of her 4 funnels spewing out black smoke.
Sailing from Kiel at sundown
We sailed at 7 p.m. and watched the sun sinking in the west as we headed out of Kiel Haven on our 5 night cruise, heading for our first port of call tomorrow in Copenhagen.
Ships seen: Botnia Seaways registered in Klapeida, Stena Germanica, Mein Shiff 4, Costa Pacifica, Keikendorf, Laboe, Bulum, Schweinhacke, Stadt Kiel, Color Fantasy, Bussard, Sprott, Bulk and Kitzeberg, Victoria Seaways, and the huge private yacht
To be continued...
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