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Adventure of the Seas

Voyager-class cruise ship

Adventure of the Seas

Summary

Voyager-class cruise ship

FieldValue
display_titleital
section1{{Infobox ship/image
imageAdventure of the Seas at Grand Turk.jpg
image_captionAdventure of the Seas at Grand Turk on 24 September 2024
section2{{Infobox ship/career
countryBahamas
flag
nameAdventure of the Seas
ownerAdventure of the Seas Inc.
operatorRoyal Caribbean International
registryNassau, Bahamas
routeCaribbean, Bahamas, Bermuda, Canada
ordered24 April 1997
builderKværner Masa-Yards Turku New Shipyard, Finland
original_cost$500 million
yard_number1346
laid_down17 June 1998
launched5 January 2001
completed26 October 2001
christened*10 November 2001
maiden_voyage18 November 2001
in_service2001–present
identification*
* Call Sign C6SA3<ref name"vesseltracker"
* <ref name"vesseltracker"/
statusIn service
section3{{Infobox ship/characteristics
class
tonnage*
length311.1 m
beam* 38.6 m (waterline)
height63 m
draft9.1 m
depth11.7 m
decks14 passenger decks
power6 × Wärtsilä 12V46 (6 × 12423 kW)
propulsion* Diesel-electric
speed22.5 kn
capacity3,807 passengers (max)
crew1,185
  • Call Sign C6SA3

  • 49.1 m (extreme)

  • Three ABB Azipods

  • 4 bow thrusters Adventure of the Seas is a operated by Royal Caribbean International. The vessel was launched and entered service in 2001. Registered in the Bahamas, Adventure of the Seas has cruised from ports in the United States and Europe to sites in the Caribbean Sea, Baltic Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Canada and Europe. The ship has a and is 311.1 m long with capacity for 3,807 guests.

Design and description

Adventure of the Seas is the third of five s measured at , and . The vessel is 311.1 m long with a beam of 38.6 m at the waterline and 49.1 m at the extreme. The vessel has a draft of 9.1 m and a depth of 11.7 m. The vessel is powered by a diesel-electric system composed of six 12423 kW Wärtsilä 12V46 engines for a total of 74538 kW driving three 3 MW ABB Azipods and four bow thrusters. This gives the cruise ship a maximum speed of 22.5 kn.

The ship has 15 decks of which 14 are passenger decks with capacity for a maximum of 3,807 guests. The Voyager-class ships have a four-deck-high horizontal promenade, called the Royal Promenade. The length of the promenade is roughly 120 m, and situated at each end is an 11-deck high atrium, called the Centrum. The passengers are spread out over 1,557 staterooms of which 765 are balcony, 174 are along the outside with 618 along the inside. 565 come with a th berth and 26 are accessible for persons with disabilities. 138 are located along the promenade. Adventure of the Seas comes equipped with an outdoor movie screen, an Aqua Park, cyclone and typhoon water slides, as well as a FlowRider. The ship has a crew of 1,185.

Construction and career

''Adventure of the Seas'' approaching [[Barbados]] on 13 May 2008

The vessel was ordered on 24 April 1997 for $500 million and constructed at Kværner Masa-Yards Turku New Shipyard in Finland. The ship's keel was laid down on 17 June 1998. Named Adventure of the Seas, the cruise ship was launched on 5 January 2001 and completed on 26 October 2001. The ship's godparents are Tara Stackpole and Kevin Hannafin of the New York Fire Department along with Margaret McDonnell and Richard Lucas of the New York Police Department. The vessel is operated by Royal Caribbean International (RCI) and is registered at Nassau, Bahamas. Adventure of the Seas departed on its maiden voyage on 18 November 2001.

''Adventure of the Seas'' docked at [[Saint Croix]] on 12 March 2012

Adventure of the Seas has cruised from United States ports to the Caribbean, Bahamas and Canada and from European ports to Baltic, Mediterranean, and Northern European destinations. In 2016, the cruise ship underwent a $61 million refurbishment, among the changes included adding additional staterooms. Adventure of the Seas was the fifth ship of the RCI fleet to undergo the refit.

COVID-19 pandemic

During the coronavirus pandemic, on 22 May 2020, Loop Jamaica reported that five crew members of Adventure of the Seas recently repatriated to Jamaica had tested positive for the virus. The ship had docked at Falmouth, Jamaica, on 19 May with 1,044 Jamaican workers aboard. All Jamaican workers were to be repatriated and tested for the virus. Those not of Jamaican nationality, stated to be over 300 people, were not allowed to disembark. By 24 May, nine crew members in total had tested positive; by 26 May 19 in total had tested positive, and 624 negative. The ship remained in the St. Maarten area during the pandemic.

On 19 March 2021, it was announced that Royal Caribbean would resume cruise services in the Caribbean, with Adventure of the Seas operating from Nassau, beginning in June 2021. Despite the ongoing pandemic, guests would be allowed to board the ship after having shown proof of vaccination and the entire crew would be vaccinated. In November 2022, Royal Caribbean updated its policy and stated that "Pre-cruise testing is no longer required to sail, with a few exceptions. At this time, only the following sailings have pre-cruise testing requirements: For Cruises from the U.S. and Caribbean with stops in Colombia, Haiti, or Honduras From Transatlantic Cruises For Cruises from Australia."

2}} at [[Grand Cayman]] on 28 April 2025

Notes

Citations

References

References

  1. "DNV: Adventure of the Seas".
  2. {{csr
  3. "Adventure of the Seas (IMO: 9167227)". vesseltracker.com.
  4. "Adventure of the Seas to Receive Water Slides, FlowRiders & Izumi Restaurant During Dry Dock".
  5. Hall, Joanna. (27 May 2012). "Britain rules the waves". Sydney Morning Herald.
  6. Witthaus, Michele. (18 May 2012). "Nine RCI ships for Europe". Cruise and Ferry.
  7. "San Juan Cruise Departures".
  8. Thakkar, Emrys. (10 June 2016). "Adventure of the Seas Refurbishment Details Revealed". cruisehive.com.
  9. (22 May 2020). "10 more COVID-19 cases, including 5 from cruise ship in Falmouth". Loop Jamaica.
  10. Davis, Garwin. (20 May 2020). "Ship Workers Arrive At Falmouth Pier". Jamaica Information Service.
  11. (20 May 2020). "Over 300 foreigners on ship in Falmouth not allowed to disembark". Loop Jamaica.
  12. (24 May 2020). "Nine cruise workers test positive for COVID-19 – process continues". Jamaica Observer.
  13. (26 May 2020). "Eight new COVID-19 cases; total now 564". Loop Jamaica.
  14. (26 May 2020). "Eight new COVID cases push tally to 564, recoveries now at 267". The Gleaner.
  15. (12 March 2021). "Latest Update: Where Are Royal Caribbean's Ships?". Cruise Industry News.
  16. (19 March 2021). "Royal Caribbean Relaunches Cruise Service in North America This June". Cruise Industry News.
  17. "What are the pre-cruise testing requirements for my cruise?". Royal Caribbean.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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