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MSC Divina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cruise ship

MSC Divina inIstanbul,Turkey
History
NameMSC Divina
OwnerMSC Cruises
OperatorMSC Cruises
Port of registry Panama
RouteCaribbean,Mediterranean
BuilderChantiers de l'Atlantique,Saint-Nazaire France
Cost$550 million
Yard numberU32
Launched3 September 2011
Christened19 May 2012,bySophia Loren
Completed16 May 2012[1]
Maiden voyage
In serviceOperational
Identification
General characteristics
Class and typeFantasia-classcruise ship
Tonnage139,072 GT[1]
Length333.33 m (1,093.60 ft)[1]
Beam124.41 ft (37.92 m)[1]
Height219.2 ft (66.81 m)
Draft28.38 ft (8.65 m)[1]
Decks18 total, 13 passenger decks
Installed powerDiesel (40,000kW)
PropulsionTwin propellers
Speed23.7 knots (43.9 km/h; 27.3 mph)[1]
Capacity
  • 3,502 passengers[2]
  • (405 inside cabins, 1,134 outside cabins)[2]
Crew1,388 crew[2]
Notes17 elevators, post-Panamax

MSC Divina is acruise ship measured at 139,400 gross tonnage (GT) owned and operated byMSC Cruises. She was constructed from 2010 to 2012 being originally namedMSC Fantastica while under construction.[2] MSC renamed her when near complete in the shipyard to honour the actressSophia Loren.[3]

TheMSC Divina is the third ship of the fourFantasia-classcruise ships, built afterMSC Splendida andMSC Fantasia, and followed by her identical sister ship theMSC Preziosa.MSC Divina andMSC Preziosa are larger than the two previous ships in the class (which were of 137,936 tons each). She is the twelfth ship in MSC's fleet, and was the joint largest ship withMSC Preziosa at 139,400 tons,[4] until the completion of the company'sMSC Seaside (160,000 tons) andMSC Meraviglia (171,598 tons) in 2017. 3,502 passengers in 1,539 cabins are accommodated with a crew complement of 1,388.[2] TheMSC Divina entered service in May 2012, with her identical sister shipMSC Preziosa following in March 2013.MSC Divina cruises in the Caribbean and Mediterranean.

Development

[edit]

In July 2010, MSC Cruises announced the construction of a newFantasia-class ship to be namedMSC Divina.[5]MSC Divina was largely based on the two previous ships in the class, however she was increased in size from 137,936 to 139,400 gross tonnage with 100 additional cabins and facilities and more efficient and energy saving mechanical and electrical systems. Passenger numbers increased to 3,502 with the crew complement increasing by 63 to 1,388. The vessel has a total of 1,539 passenger cabins. The main dimensions of the vessel have remained the same as the previous two ships, with the length being 333.33 meters, the moulded breadth of the hull 37.92 meters and the draught remaining the same at 8.45 meters.

Italian naval architects De Jorio Design International designed the ship and the interior areas with construction bySTX Europe at Saint-Nazaire France.[6] When near completion MSC Cruises announced thatFantastica would be renamedMSC Divina to honour the Italian actressSophia Loren. Loren had mentioned to MSC Cruises president, Gianluigi Aponte, that she had wished to have a ship named after her. Aponte approved and renamed the MSC ship next into service after Loren.[3]

Launch

[edit]

The ship was delivered to MSC Cruises on 19 May 2012 atMarseille in France, with her christening by Sophia Loren on 26 May 2012.[7] The ship embarked on her maiden cruising voyage the next day.

The maiden voyage was met with protest when the ship enteredVenice. Ms Loren received letters claiming that air pollution was created by the ship and the wake from her bow and vibrations created by her engines could damage historical buildings.[8]

Specifications

[edit]

The ship is 333 m (1,092.52 ft) long,[9] and carries up to 3,502 passengers with a crew complement of 1,388. She has 13 passenger decks,[10] which contain 1,134 outside cabins and 405 inside cabins.[2] Her speed is quoted at 23 knots (43 km/h; 26 mph).[2]

Divina has electric propulsion motors and Rolls-Royce folding fin stabilizers to reduce the ship's roll.[6]

TheMSC Divina at dock inPort Canaveral, Florida in 2016

The ship's drivetrain is the more efficient diesel/electric, powered by five Wärtsilä diesel engines. The engines produce low NOx emissions, using low-sulphur fuel. The engines turn alternators producing electricity. Propulsion is by two GE Energy Power Conversion electric motors with each giving 21,850 kW at 138 rpm. Redundancy is provided, with the two fully independent electric motors each turning a fixed propeller on conventional propeller shafts. The two propellers are fully independent ensuring propulsion if one fails. The same approach was applied to the two fully independent steering systems. Further advantage of using electric motors to turn the propellers is in small sunshine ports. Each propeller is controlled individually, and quickly, for ease of ship manoeuvrability along with the four bow thrusters. The need for tugs while in the many ports of call is greatly reduced. Two of the five engines have 16 cylinders each with an output of 16,800 kW, and the remaining three engines have 12 cylinders each producing 12,600 kW. Total power generated is 71,400 kW at 514 rpm.[6]

A sea water distillation plant produces all the fresh water needed onboard using two evaporators and two reverse osmosis plants. The ship does not pump onboard water from shore water stations. The highly efficient evaporators are completely pollution free using a system of free heat recovery as the power source.[6]

Itineraries

[edit]

From 27 May to 2 June 2012, theMSC Divina cruised in the Mediterranean calling atCivitavecchia in Rome;Messina in Sicily; andValletta in Malta. The ship provided cruises in the Mediterranean calling at Italy, Greece, Turkey and Croatia. In November, she cruised in the eastern part of the Mediterranean, calling atKotor, Montenegro;Marmaris, Turkey; andValletta, Malta. She skippedPiraeus (Athens), in Greece, because of a strike, and also skippedHeraklion, in Greece, because of high winds.[11] She then provided cruises with stops in Italy, Spain,Canary Islands, Portugal, and Morocco.

In late 2013, sherepositioned toMiami, Florida, becoming the first MSC vessel in the fleet to serve the North American market, and provided cruises to the Caribbean year round.[12] The ship hosted theHoly Ship! music festival from January 2014 until February 2016.[13][14] Her year-round program ended in Spring 2019, and she now operates in the Caribbean seasonally.

Incidents

[edit]

On the afternoon of 18 June 2014, a Mexican passenger jumped into the sea, after drinking alcohol for two consecutive days. Moments after the "man overboard", theMSC Divina stopped, with the captain instructing a search for Amores. After several hours the search was abandoned being unsuccessful.MSC Divina resumed her route, with the search resumed by the Brazilian Maritime Authority. After failing to find the passenger the search was abandoned.[15] The passenger was aboardMSC Divina after he won a contest organized on the occasion of the2014 FIFA World Cup by a beer company. Throughout the passenger's journey aboard theMSC Divina and even shortly before he jumped, he had published his account on the social networkTwitter, images and videos which stated the festive atmosphere that existed on board the vessel. Other passengers reported that the jump was to impress a young host and interviewer of Mexican television, who allegedly he had met on boardMSC Divina and who also traveled toBrazil.[16]

In late 2017,MSC Divina was featured in a photo exhibition byGianni Berengo Gardin underlying the effects of cruise ships on the historical city of Venice.[17]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdef"MSC Divinia (9585285)".BV Fleet.Bureau Veritas. Retrieved19 February 2020.
  2. ^abcdefg"MSC Cruises MSC Divina Ship Information".Travel Weekly. Retrieved13 November 2012.
  3. ^ab"MSC Cruises changes name of new ship". Travel Weekly. 5 November 2010. Archived fromthe original on 7 June 2012. Retrieved24 May 2012.
  4. ^"2 new cruise ships launched in Europe | Roadtripping".
  5. ^"MSC Announces FANTASTICA". Maritime Matters. 23 July 2010. Archived fromthe original on 3 November 2011. Retrieved24 May 2012.
  6. ^abcd"Special Report"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved23 April 2015.
  7. ^"MSC Divina christened". Travel Weekly. Retrieved21 March 2020.
  8. ^Pullella, Philip (2 June 2012)."Venice environmentalists ask Sophia Loren to renounce ship". Reuters. Retrieved14 November 2012.
  9. ^"MSC Divina – Vessel's Details and Current Position – IMO: 9585285, MMSI: 373178000".MarineTraffic.com. Retrieved13 November 2012.
  10. ^"MSC Cruises MSC Divina Deck Plans".Travel Weekly. Retrieved13 November 2012.
  11. ^"Piraeus Strikes Force MSC Divina Itinerary Change".Cruise Industry News. 9 November 2012. Retrieved13 November 2012.
  12. ^"MSC Divina to Sail Year Round From Miami - Cruise Industry News | Cruise News". Cruise Industry News. 26 March 2013. Retrieved15 August 2013.
  13. ^"Holy Ship!!! 2014 Booked for a Boat Named After Sophia Loren".Spin. 25 March 2013.
  14. ^"HOLY SHIP! Makes Exciting Changes For 2017 Back-To-Back Adventures".Live For Live Music. 12 April 2016. Retrieved17 January 2017.
  15. ^Concluye Marina búsqueda de mexicano que cayó en Brasil
  16. ^Jorge Alberto López Amores[usurped]
  17. ^Le grandi navi a Venezia viste da Gianni Berengo Gardin

External links

[edit]
Current fleet
Future fleet
Former ships
Classes
Authority control databases: GeographicEdit this at Wikidata
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