MS Freedom of the Seas

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"Freedom of the Seas" redirects here. For the concept in international and admiralty law, see freedom of the seas, and for the play and film of this title see Freedom of the Seas (play).

Freedom of the Seas off the coast of Cozumel, Mexico in its maiden voyage.
Career
Name: Freedom of the Seas
Namesake: Royal Caribbean's Freedom Class of cruise ships
Owner: Royal Caribbean International
Operator: Royal Caribbean International
Port of Registry:  Bahamas
Ordered: September 2003
Builder: Aker Yards, Turku, Finland
Cost: US $~800,000,000 (~750m Euro or GB£520m)
Laid down: November 9, 2004
Christened: May 12, 2006 at Bayonne, NJ
on New York Harbor by Katherine Louise Calder
[1]
Maiden voyage: 4 June 2006 (Caribbean)[1]
In service: 4 June 2006
Status: In service
General characteristics
Class and type: Freedom-class cruise ship
Tonnage: 154,407 gross register tons (GRT)
Length: 1,111.9 ft (338.91 m)
Beam: 126.64 ft (38.60 m) waterline 184 ft (56.08 m) extreme (bridge wings) ,
Height: 209 ft (63.7 m or 15 decks high)
Draught: 28 ft (8.53 m)
Decks: 18 total decks, 15 passenger decks
Installed power: Six Wärtsilä 46 V12 diesels each rated at 12.6 MW (~17,000hp) driving electric generators at 514 rpm.
Propulsion: Three ABB Azipod podded electric propulsion units, two of them azimuthing, one fixed. 4 additional bow thrusters.
Speed: 21.6-knot (40 km/h/25 mph)
Capacity: 4,370 passengers
Crew: 1,360 crew

MS Freedom of the Seas is a cruise ship owned and operated by Royal Caribbean International. It is the namesake of Royal Caribbean's Freedom Class of cruise ships, and can accommodate over 4,300 passengers and 1,300 crew on fifteen passenger decks. In addition to two sister ships, Freedom will keep the title of the largest passenger ships ever built until construction of the Oasis Class ships in 2009, also owned by Royal Caribbean International.

Contents

[edit] Construction

The ship under construction at Aker Yards in Turku.

The Freedom of the Seas was built at the Aker Yards drydock in Turku, Finland, which also is building the other ships of the Freedom Class. Upon its completion, it became the largest passenger ship ever built, taking that honor from Cunard's Queen Mary 2.

Freedom is 2.4 meters narrower than QM2 at the waterline, 6 meters shorter, and has 1.5 meters less draft. Freedom however is the larger ship in terms of gross tonnage. While its gross tonnage was estimated to range from 154,000 GT[2] to 160,000 GT,[3] its official rating by Det Norske Veritas, a Norwegian marine classification society, is 154,407 GT,[4] compared with QM2's 148,528 GT. Freedom has the highest gross tonnage of any passenger ship yet built.

[edit] Features

The ship features three swimming areas: an interactive water park, a dedicated adult pool and the main pool. There are 2 adults only whirlpools cantilevered out from the ship's sides, the Royal Promenade sports, a coffee shop, Sorrento's Pizzeria, a Ben and Jerry's ice-cream shop, Vintage's winery, the Bull and Bear Irish pub, and many Duty-free shops. The 13th deck features a sports area with amenities such as a rock climbing wall, the FlowRider (an onboard wave generator for surfing), a miniature golf course and a full size basketball court. Other items include an ice skating rink, a casino, a Johnny Rockets, Wi-Fi capabilities throughout the ship, flat panel televisions in all staterooms, and cell phone connectivity.

[edit] Career

Freedom was docked at Blohm und Voss in Hamburg, Germany on 17 April 2006 to repair a damaged bearing in one of the three Azipod propulsion units and to put on some of the finishing touches prior to its official handover to Royal Caribbean International on 24 April 2006. It then departed to Oslo, Norway on 25 April for official festivities. It then sailed for Southampton, England on 27 April and arrived at 9am on 29 April. The ship sailed on its first transatlantic crossing on 3 May 2006.

Freedom arrived in New York Harbor USA for its official naming ceremony on 12 May 2006 which was broadcast live on NBC's The Today Show from Cape Liberty Cruise Port in Bayonne, New Jersey (the ship's official New York berth), and thereafter travelled to Boston for the weekend of May 19-22. It began operations out of Miami with its first cruise and maiden voyage on June 4, sailing to western Caribbean locations in Mexico, the Cayman Islands and Jamaica as well as Labadee, in Haiti, one of Royal Caribbean's private resorts. The added width of the ship is utilized by the interior promenade extending through the upper decks of the ships. This gives all upper level cabins a window, either to the port or starboard side or inwards to the promenade. This design was first used in the cruiseferry M/S Silja Serenade in 1990 and its twin ship, M/S Silja Symphony in 1991.

For America's Next Top Model Cycle 9 casting the ship was used for the setting.

Freedom is currently scheduled to move its home port from the Port of Miami-Dade to Port Canaveral, where it will replace Mariner of the Seas, in May 2009.[5]

[edit] Facts and figures

The basketball court on Freedom of the Seas
  • The ship has 30 lifeboats.
  • It is about 229 ft (69.80 m) longer, about 108,000 GT larger, and can accommodate 2,147 more passengers than RMS Titanic.
  • Its operating costs are $1 million per day.
  • It has 75,000 lightbulbs and 4,700 works of art, and uses 35,000 kg of ice daily.
  • The largest suite, the Presidential Suite, is 113 square meters, accommodate 14 people and has ten flat panel TVs, a private whirlpool, a wet bar, and a Yamaha GC1 baby-grand piano.
  • Rooms for the maiden voyage were priced from $1,900 to $22,000 for the week.
  • It consumes approximately 28,000 pounds (12,800 kg) of fuel per hour[6], enough to refill a 13 gallon tank in a car at one tank a week for over six years.
  • It is one of the few ships with 4 bow thrusters on each side with 8 bow thrusters in total.

[edit] Provisions

During a typical week long cruise, the Freedom of the Seas goes through the following amount of food:

  • 234,000 appetizers (6 appetizers per day per person); 105,000 meals and 300,680 desserts (7.5 desserts per day per person)
  • 20,000 lbs. of beef, including 69,000 steaks (1.7 steaks per day per person)
  • 12,000 lbs. of chicken
  • 4,000 lbs. of seafood; 2,500 lbs. of salmon and 1,400 lbs. of lobster
  • 65,000 lbs. of fresh vegetables and 35,000 lbs. of fresh fruits (2.5 lbs. of fruit and veg per day per person)
  • 5,800 lbs. of cheese
  • 28,000 fresh eggs
  • 18,000 slices of pizza
  • 8,000 gallons of ice cream
  • 1,500 lbs. of coffee and 1,500 gallons of milk
  • 11,500 cans of soda; 19,200 bottles and cans of beer and 2,900 bottles of wine

[edit] Gallery

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Records
Preceded by
Queen Mary 2
World's largest passenger ship
2006 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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