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SS United States saved

Posted: 2016-02-04 05:10pm
by Thanas
Link
Crystal to refurbish historic SS United States to its former glory

An historic ship that still holds the title for the world’s fastest luxury liner may soon set sail again after being destined for the scrap heap.

The S.S. United States, built in 1952 by United States Lines to capture the world’s trans-Atlantic speed record, has just been tossed a life preserver by Crystal Cruises, which signed a purchase option for the ship.

In a press conference Thursday Crystal's chief executive, Edie Rodriguez, outlined the terms of the deal, which first requires a nine-month feasibility study while paying about $60,000 a month to care for the ship.

The nonprofit, Washington-based S.S. United States Conservancy currently owns the ship, which has been docked in South Philadelphia since 1996.

“It is our goal that the S.S. United States re-emerge as a modern luxury vessel,” said Rodriguez.

Rodriguez said once the feasibility study is complete, plans are to refurbish the 20,000 passenger ship –nicknamed the Big U--to its former glory when it once carried passengers such as Princess Grace of Monaco, The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Cary Grant and Coco Channel.

She said features would include gold-leaf embellishments, sculptures and top-of-the-line services and culinary experiences. Also due to get a makeover is the Navajo Lounge, which originally boasted a series of sand art paintings depicting Navajo rituals by artist Peter Ostuni.

Late last year the S.S. United States Conservancy almost had to scrap the ship --which is larger than the Titanic--due to dwindling funds.

During her heyday, the ship was reported to have been capable of speeds of over 44.7 knots, or about 50 mph --(a tightly held secret throughout the Cold War) and her steam turbine propulsion system was only slightly slower than the engines on today’s nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. In 1952, the ship’s maiden voyage, from New York to Southampton, England, was accomplished in only three days, 10 hours and 40 minutes and it still holds the “Blue Riband" record for the fastest transatlantic crossing.

Taken out of service in 1969, the S.S. United States was stripped of its interior in 1984 when items, including the china, silverware, furniture –even nautical fixtures --were auctioned off.

Estimates to rebuild the ship could be as much as $800 million and Crystal said it would be rebuilt extensively to meet current safety and EPA standards. It is expected to carry 800 guests and have the same 1.6 passenger-to-crew ratio as the 1,070-passenger Crystal Serenity –which cost $350 million to build.

Rodriguez is hopeful that the ship could be taking passengers as soon as 2018.

“We will be remiss as an industry if we didn’t revitalize this wonderful vessel,” she said.
I believe it when I see it but am cautiously optimistic. The hull is almost 70 years old and has not been moved for several decades, but I really, really hope for the best.

If all else fails, I hope they reconsider the Bremerhaven option.

Re: SS United States saved

Posted: 2016-02-04 09:14pm
by NecronLord
Great news if it pans out, but really they're only doing a fiesability study it seems.

Re: SS United States saved

Posted: 2016-02-05 07:02am
by Sea Skimmer
BS title The ship is not saved in any useful sense. This company has agreed to fund its berthing for 9 months, a cost of about a half million dollars while it conducts as feasibility study into refurbishing the liner for over 700 million dollars. It has committed to utterly nothing past that and in short, we have been here before. Multiple times in fact projects have gotten past the feasibility study phase and then implode against the cold reality of how much it would cost to do anything. Putting the ship back into service as a ship is pretty absurd at this point given that it would need an entirely new powerplant. Some kind of shoreside attraction is far more realistic but such sites are limited in number, and absurdly political in planning.

The guy BTW who wanted to bring the ship to Bremerhaven couldn't raise any money to do so.

Re: SS United States saved

Posted: 2016-02-05 06:35pm
by Enigma
You might want to correct the article you quoted. 2,000 passenger ship, not 20,000. I doubt any cruise ship ever held that many passengers. :)

Re: SS United States saved

Posted: 2016-02-05 11:58pm
by Sea Skimmer
Well, 16,683 men once sailed on Queen Mary, of whom 943 were crew. United States has rather less total interior space though.

Re: SS United States saved

Posted: 2016-02-06 08:30am
by Enigma
Sea Skimmer wrote:Well, 16,683 men once sailed on Queen Mary, of whom 943 were crew. United States has rather less total interior space though.
That still isn't 20,000. ;)