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Freedom Of The Seas

Freedom of the Seas in Port Canaveral, Florida in 2016, after her 2015 refurbishment
History
Bahamas
Name:Freedom of the Seas
Owner:Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.[1]
Operator:Royal Caribbean International
Port of registry:Nassau, Bahamas, Bahamas
Route:San Juan, Puerto Rico & Caribbean
Ordered:September 18, 2003[1]
Builder:Aker YardsTurku Shipyard, Finland
Cost:US$800 million
Yard number:55
Laid down:November 9, 2004
Launched:August 19, 2005[1]
Christened:May 12, 2006
Completed:April 24, 2006[1]
Maiden voyage:4 June 2006 (Caribbean)
In service:4 June 2006
Identification:
  • Call sign: C6UZ7
  • IMO number: 9304033
  • DNV GL ID: 25177
  • MMSI number: 309906000
Status:In service
General characteristics
Class and type:
Tonnage:
  • 155,889 GT(2015-present)[1]
  • 154,407 GT(2006-2015)[2]
Length:1,111.46 ft (338.774 m)[1]
Beam:126.64 ft (38.60 m) waterline 184 ft (56.08 m) extreme (bridge wings)
Height:209 ft (63.70 m)
Draught:29.61 ft (9.026 m)[1]
Decks:19 total decks, 15 passenger decks
Installed power:6 × Wärtsilä 12V46 (6 × 12,600 kW)
Propulsion:
  • Diesel-electric; Three ABBAzipod units, two azimuthing and one fixed.
  • Four bow thrusters
Speed:21.6 knots (40.0 km/h; 24.9 mph)[2]
Capacity:
  • 3,782 (double occupancy)
  • 4,515 (maximum occupancy)[3]
Crew:1,360

Freedom of the Seas reviews regularly highlight the dining options and the speed with which staff serves passengers. Kid-friendly options, including Johnny Rockets and Ben & Jerry’s, serve fare much of the day, and adults can slip into Chops Grille or Giovanni’s table for a fancier atmosphere. Royal Caribbean International launched the Freedom of the Seas in May 2006. The cruise line distributed these debut photos of the new ship, which were taken on the Freedom of the Seas inaugural voyage and during early sea trials. The Freedom of the Seas has many exciting, innovative features that amaze and entertain its 3,600 passengers.

MS Freedom of the Seas is a cruise ship operated by Royal Caribbean International. She is the namesake of Royal Caribbean's Freedom class, and can accommodate 3,634 passengers and 1,300 crew on fifteen passenger decks. The vessel also has 4 crew decks below the waterline. Even art lovers can pursue their passion at Freedom of the Seas’ Britto Gallery. A worthy representative of one of the world’s most revolutionary cruise lines, Freedom of the Seas is the perfect ship to cruise the Mediterranean, Caribbean and Mexico. Freedom of the seas (Latin: mare liberum, lit. 'free sea') is a principle in the international law and sea. It stresses freedom to navigate the oceans. It also disapproves of war fought in water. The freedom is to be breached only in a necessary international agreement. Freedom of the Seas is ranked 8 among Royal Caribbean cruise ships by U.S. Check itineraries, photos and ratings from 2752 travelers. 34 reviews of Royal Caribbean, Freedom of the Seas 'Very great cruise to 5 different Caribbean countries. We really did enjoy our stay. This was a 7 night cruise for us, and our third cruise. Efren, Jawi, (some guy who cleaned room 8348)and a few.

MS Freedom of the Seas is a cruise ship operated by Royal Caribbean International. She is the namesake of Royal Caribbean's Freedom class, and can accommodate 3,634 passengers and 1,300 crew [3] on fifteen passenger decks. The vessel also has 4 crew decks below the waterline. Freedom of the Seas was the largest passenger ship ever built (by gross tonnage) from 2006 until construction of her sister ship, Liberty of the Seas in 2007. As of November 2018, she is the 15th largest passenger ship in the world by gross tonnage, at 155,889 GT.

Freedom Of The Seas Window

  • 2Incidents
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Construction[edit]

Freedom of the Seas under construction at Turku Shipyard in Turku, Finland on February 23, 2006.

The Freedom of the Seaswas built at the Aker YardsTurku Shipyard, Finland, which built the ships of the Voyager class as well as the other ships of the Freedom class. Upon its completion, it became the largest passenger ship ever built, taking that honor from Cunard'sQueen Mary 2.

Freedom of the Seas is 2.4 metres (7 ft 10 in) narrower than QM2 at the waterline, 6 metres (20 ft) shorter, has 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) less draft, is 8.3 metres (27 ft) less tall and 10 miles per hour (16 km/h) slower. Freedom however is the larger ship in terms of gross tonnage. Its gross tonnage as verified by Det Norske Veritas, a Norwegian marine classification society, was 154,407 GT,[4] compared with QM2's 148,528 GT.[5][6]Freedom of the Seas had the highest gross tonnage of any passenger ship yet built until the 2007 completion of Liberty of the Seas.

The ship has four bow thrusters.[7] When at sea Freedom of the Seas consumes approximately 12,800 kg (28,000 pounds) of fuel per hour.[8]

Incidents[edit]

Fire[edit]

On July 22, 2015, a fire started in a mechanical area of the ship around 9:15 AM when the ship was en route from Cape Canaveral, Florida to Falmouth, Jamaica. All passengers were sent to their muster stations to abandon ship if the fire had gotten out of control. One crew member sustained first degree burns.[9]

Freedom Of The Seas Pictures

Death[edit]

Freedom Of The Seas Refurbishment 2020

On July 7, 2019, 18-month-old Chloe Wiegand fell through an open window on the 11th deck while the ship was docked in San Juan, Puerto Rico, after her grandfather had placed her on a railing.[10]

Facilities[edit]

The ship has an interior promenade 445 feet (136 m) long called the 'Royal Promenade'.[11]

The ship has three swimming areas: an interactive water park, a dedicated adult pool, and the main pool. The 13th deck has a sports area with a rock climbing wall, the FlowRider surf simulator, a miniature golf course and a full size basketball court. Other items include an ice skating rink, a casino and a three-deck-high broadway-style theater. Many of the ship's interiors were extensively decorated by muralist Clarissa Parish.[12]

Service history[edit]

Freedom Of The Seas Photos

The ship 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 some minor modifications prior to her official handover to Royal Caribbean International on 24 April 2006. She then visited Oslo, Norway before sailing for Southampton, England. The ship sailed on its first transatlantic crossing on 3 May 2006.

Freedom of the Seas arrived in New York HarborUSA for her 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 traveled to Boston for the weekend of May 19–22. The ship's godmother was selected as Katherine Louise Calder, a Portland, Oregonfoster care provider.[13] She began operations out of Miami with her first cruise and maiden voyage on 4 June, sailing to western Caribbean locations.

On 4 May 2009, Freedom of the Seas moved her home port from the Port of Miami-Dade to Port Canaveral. The ship underwent her first dry dock refurbishment in late March 2011.[14]

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In January 2015, the ship underwent another 24-day dry dock. During the dry dock some new interior passenger cabins were added.[15]

In winter 2016, Freedom of the Seas repositioned to Port Everglades, from where she undertook cruises in the Caribbean.[16] After homeporting in Barcelona in the spring and summer of 2017, Freedom of the Seas returned to Port Everglades. In May 2018, she commenced sailing Southern Caribbean sailings out of San Juan, Puerto Rico until April 2021.

Freedom

Freedom Of The Seas Deck Plan

Freedom of the Seas is scheduled to undergo a $116 million dry dock early in 2020.[17]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdefg'Freedom of the Seas (25177)'. DNV GL Vessel Register. Det Norske Veritas. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  2. ^ ab'Freedom of the Seas'. Royal Caribbean International. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  3. ^ ab'Freedom of the Seas Fast Facts'. Royal Caribbean Press Center. Royal Caribbean International. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  4. ^'Freedom of the Seas (25177)'. DNV GL Vessel Register. Det Norske Veritas. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  5. ^United States Coast Guard Maritime Information Exchange, Queen Mary 2, Retrieved 2012-03-26
  6. ^Queen Mary 2, inquiry for IMO 924106, Ships in Class (registration required). Lloyd's Register. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  7. ^'Freedom of the Seas'. Ship Technology. 2011-06-15. Retrieved 2013-07-21.
  8. ^'Wärtsilä 46F'. wartsila.com.
  9. ^Sampson, Hannah (July 22, 2015). 'Cruise to continue after Freedom of the Seas fire in Jamaica'. The Miami Herald. Retrieved May 8, 2019.
  10. ^Baynes, Chris. 'Young girl falls to death from cruise ship 'after being accidentally dropped by grandfather''. The Independent. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  11. ^[1]Archived November 10, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^www.clarissaparish.comArchived 2017-12-08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 2012
  13. ^https://www.cruisecritic.com/news/news.cfm?ID=1526 Calder
  14. ^'Port Canaveral'. portcanaveral.org. Archived from the original on 2008-04-12.
  15. ^'Royal Caribbean Cruise Ship Completes Dry Dock, Features New Cabins and Restaurants'. Cruise Critic.
  16. ^'Royal Caribbean announces 2016-2017 Caribbean cruise ship deployments'. Cruise Critic. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  17. ^'ISLAND HOPPING MEETS CHART-TOPPING THRILLS ON AMPLIFIED FREEDOM OF THE SEAS'. www.royalcaribbeanpresscenter.com. Retrieved 2019-08-23.

External links[edit]

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