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Chantiers de l'Atlantique
French shipyard
French shipyard
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| logo | Logo des Chantiers de l'Atlantique.svg |
| logo_size | 240px |
| foundation | |
| type | Private |
| location | Saint-Nazaire, France |
| industry | Shipbuilding |
| revenue | €2.54 billion |
| revenue_year | 2024 |
| operating_income | €183 million |
| income_year | 2023 |
| owner | French state: 84.3% |
| Naval Group: 11.7% | |
| Employees: 2.1% | |
| COFIPME: 1.6% | |
| homepage | Chantiers de l'Atlantique |
| num_employees | 3,913 |
| num_employees_year | 2025 |
Naval Group: 11.7% Employees: 2.1% COFIPME: 1.6%
The shipyard was owned by Alstom from 1976 onwards, became Alstom-Atlantique, and was later part of Aker Yards when Aker Group acquired the Alstom Marine business in 2006. In 2008, the South Korean company STX Corporation acquired Aker Yards, and the shipyard became part of STX Europe (formed by the renaming of Aker Yards).
After the bankruptcy of STX Corporation, the shipyard was acquired by the French government and reverted to its original name of Chantiers de l'Atlantique.[[File:Normandie-under-construction.jpg|left|thumb| under construction]]
History

The current Chantiers de l'Atlantique yard evolved from the Ateliers et Chantiers de Saint-Nazaire Penhoët, Saint-Nazaire, France, famous for building the transatlantic liners: , , and .[[Image:Batillus tanker in Saint-Nazaire.jpg|thumb|The oil tanker [[Batillus class supertankers|Batillus]] at the end of its construction in Saint-Nazaire, being refueled by the Port-Vendres]]
It was renamed to its current name in 1955 by the merger of Ateliers et Chantiers de la Loire and Ateliers et Chantiers de Penhoët. In 1961, it built the transatlantic ocean liner , the world's longest passenger vessel only overall, but not at the waterline. After the construction of the last Compagnie Générale Transatlantique liner and the closure of the Suez Canal, the yard began building large tankers, including , , and . A new dry dock was built for this purpose and allowed the construction of tankers exceeding one million tonnes, but it remained mainly unused except for the construction in 1975–1976 of the sister ships and Nestor and then again idle until construction of Cunard's liner .
Between 1985 and 1998, the shipyard built several cruise ships for Royal Caribbean Cruise Line (RCCL). In 1987 the first of these ships, , was delivered, and was the first mega cruise ship in the world. Subsequent deliveries to RCCL included , , , Legend of the Seas, , , and . In 2003, the shipyard also delivered to Crystal Cruises and Queen Mary 2 to Cunard. During the construction of RMS Queen Mary 2, a gangway to the dry-docked ship collapsed, killing sixteen people.
On 4 January 2006 Aker Yards purchased the Marine Division of Alstom, which included the Chantiers de l'Atlantique shipyard. In March 2007 Aker ASA divested its interest in Aker Yards, with South Korean STX Corporation acquiring a 39.2% stake in Aker Yards in October. By 3 November 2008 STX Corporation had acquired a controlling stake in the company, renaming it to STX Europe. The same year, the French government purchased a 33.34% stake in the shipyard.
After the bankruptcy of STX Corporation in 2016, STX France was put up for sale, and the Italian state-owned shipyard Fincantieri showed interest in acquiring STX France.
In September 2017, after difficult negotiations and a brief nationalization of the shipyard by the French government, the involved parties reached an agreement, with Fincantieri acquiring a 50% stake in STX France, and the remainder being held by the French Naval Group and the French government. A month later, it was announced that the Saint-Nazaire shipyard would regain its original name, Chantiers de l'Atlantique.

In 2022, a new crane entered service during the construction of , replacing the older crane from 1967.
Ships
Notable passenger liners built by at the Chantiers de l'Atlantique yard (former Ateliers et Chantiers de Saint-Nazaire Penhoët) include:
| Ship name (as built) | Year delivered | Built for | Current status | Notes | 1910s | 1920s | 1930s | 1950s | 1960s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:France 1912.jpg | frameless]] | SS France | 1912 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | Scrapped 1936 | |||||||||||
| [[File:Paris 1921.jpg | frameless]] | SS Paris | 1921 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | Burned and Capsized at Dock 1939, Scrapped 1947 | |||||||||||
| [[File:SS Ile de France.jpg | frameless]] | SS Ile de France | 1927 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | Scrapped 1959 | Was used as a "movie prop" in the film The Last Voyage, prior to scrapping. | ||||||||||
| MS Lafayette | 1930 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | Burned, scrapped | |||||||||||||
| [[File:L'Atlantique 1932-20170828 B.png | frameless]] | SS L'Atlantique | 1931 | Compagnie de Navigation Sud Atlantique | Burned, and scrapped | |||||||||||
| SS Champlain | 1932 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | Sunk WWII | |||||||||||||
| [[File:SS Normandie at sea 01.jpg | frameless]] | SS Normandie | 1935 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | Burned and Capsized at Dock 1942, Scrapped 1948 | It was the world's largest ship until Cunard's Queen Elizabeth, held Blue Riband. Capsized in New York Harbor, 1942. Scrapped in NJ, 1946. | ||||||||||
| [[File:SS Pasteur Hdouay4.jpg | frameless]] | SS Pasteur | 1939 | Compagnie de Navigation Sud-Atlantique | Sank 1980 on way to scrap yard | |||||||||||
| SS Bretagne | 1952 | Société Générale de Transport Maritimes | Scrapped 1963 | |||||||||||||
| MS General Mangin | 1953 | Cie de Nav Fraissinet et Cyprien Fabre | Scrapped 1986 | |||||||||||||
| [[File:Patmos2005 (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | MV Jean Mermoz | 1957 | Cie de Nav Fraissinet et Cyprien Fabre | Scrapped 2008 | |||||||||||
| [[File:SS France Hong Kong 74.jpg | frameless]] | SS France | 1962 | Compagnie Générale Transatlantique | Scrapped 2008 | Launched in 1961, the world's longest passenger ship from 1961 to 2004, became the SS Norway. | ||||||||||
| [[File:Ancerville in the port of Sochi..jpg | center | frameless]] | MS Ancerville | 1962 | Compagnie de Navigation Paquet | Hotel Ship | A former passenger ship built in 1962, integrated as part of Sea World, a multi-purpose complex in Shenzhen, China since 1983. | |||||||||
| [[File:Brillant SHALOM7.jpg | frameless]] | SS Shalom | 1964 | Zim Israel Navigation Company | Sank on way to Scrap Yard 2001 | Israel flagship (1964). | ||||||||||
| [[File:"Grand Victoria" - Thames, 2006.jpg | frameless]] | MS Renaissance | 1966 | Compagnie Francaise de Navigation | Scrapped 2010 | A French cruise liner that entered service in 1966 for service on the Marseilles-Haifa route. | ||||||||||
| [[File:Tianjin Hai River.JPG | frameless]] | MV Yaohua | 1967 | China Ocean Shipping Company | Possibly Hotel Ship | Last ship to be launched from slipway at St. Nazaire | ||||||||||
| [[File:Nieuw Amsterdam at Vancouver.jpg | frameless]] | MS Nieuw Amsterdam | 1983 | Holland America Line | Scrapped 2018 | |||||||||||
| [[File:Marco polo-amsterdam-noordam (2459029719) (noordam).jpg | frameless]] | MS Noordam | 1984 | Holland America Line | Scrapped 2022 | |||||||||||
| [[File:Sovereign of the Seas Nassau Bahamas (244161813) (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | MS Sovereign of the Seas | 1987 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | Scrapped 2020 | Was the largest cruise ship in the world from 1988 to 1990, and its sister ships, MS Monarch of the Seas and MS Majesty of the Seas. | ||||||||||
| [[File:DCasanovaLELA1989.jpg | frameless]] | Danielle Casanova | 1989 | SNCM | In service | Sailing nowadays for Corsica Linea as the Mediterranee. | ||||||||||
| [[File:Columbus turning to port side Tallinn Bay Tallinn 31 July 2017.jpg | frameless]] | MS Star Princess | 1989 | Sitmar Cruises/Princess Cruises | Scrapped 2021 | Ordered for Sitmar Cruises as the Fair Majesty | ||||||||||
| [[File:Saint-Malo - MV Bretagne 130513-01 (cropped).JPG | frameless]] | Bretagne | 1989 | Brittany Ferries | In Service | Car ferry launched in 1989. Sails on the Portsmouth to Saint-Malo route. Brittany Ferries Ex-Flagship. | ||||||||||
| [[File:NordicEmpress1.jpg | frameless]] | Nordic Empress | 1990 | Admiral Cruises/Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | In Service | Ordered as Future Seas for Admiral Cruises. | ||||||||||
| [[File:Monarch of the Seas.JPG | frameless]] | Monarch of the Seas | 1992 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | Scrapped 2021 | |||||||||||
| [[File:MajestyOfTheSeas2009.jpg | frameless]] | Majesty of the Seas | 1992 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | Laid up | |||||||||||
| [[File:Zenith & Dreamward at Grand Cayman (Dreamward).jpg | frameless]] | Dreamward | 1992 | Norwegian Cruise Line | Scrapped 2022 | |||||||||||
| [[File:Kloster Cruise Windward 439 (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Windward | 1993 | Norwegian Cruise Line | Scrapped 2022 | |||||||||||
| [[File:Legend of the Seas (1) (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Legend of the Seas | 1995 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Splendouroftheseas2008brazil.JPG | frameless]] | Splendor of the Seas | 1996 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Napoleon Bonaparte SNCM 1996.jpg | frameless]] | Napoleon Bonaparte | 1996 | SNCM | In Service | Sailing nowadays for Grandi Navi Veloci as the Rhapsody. | ||||||||||
| [[File:Rhapsodyoftheseasargostoli.jpg | frameless]] | Rhapsody of the Seas | 1997 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Cruise Ship Paul Gauguin 02.jpg | frameless]] | Paul Gauguin | 1997 | Services Et Transports / Radisson Seven Seas Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Vision of the Seas departing Tallinn 19 August 2013.JPG | frameless]] | Vision of the Seas | 1998 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Insignia (ship, 1998) IMO 9156462; in Split, 2011-10-01; (1).jpg | frameless]] | R One | 1998 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Regatta, Fremantle, 2018 (04).jpg | frameless]] | R Two | 1998 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Pacific Princess in Papeete 2009.jpg | frameless]] | R Three | 1999 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Ocean Princess departing Tallinn 23 June 2013.JPG | frameless]] | R Four | 1999 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Mistral Kiel2003.jpg | frameless]] | Mistral | 1999 | Festival Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Kobe Nautica01s5s3200.jpg | frameless]] | R Five | 2000 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Azamara Journey, Geiranger (14863575491).jpg | frameless]] | R Six | 2000 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Celebrity Millennium at Kurushima Strait (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Millennium | 2000 | Celebrity Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Azamara Quest (ship, 2000) IMO 9210218; Split, 2013-09-29 (1).jpg | frameless]] | R Seven | 2000 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Azamara pursuit.jpg | frameless]] | R Eight | 2000 | Renaissance Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:GTS Celebrity Infinity.jpg | frameless]] | Infinity | 2001 | Celebrity Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:GTS Summit - Celebrity Cruises - RCCL.JPG | frameless]] | Summit | 2001 | Celebrity Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Seven Seas Mariner Montevideo.JPG | frameless]] | Seven Seas Mariner | 2001 | Radisson Seven Seas Cruises | In Service | This is the world's first all balcony luxury cruise ship. | ||||||||||
| [[File:European Vision (ship, 2001) 001 (European Vision).jpg | frameless]] | European Vision | 2001 | Festival Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Port of Palma de Mallorca May 2003 (3) (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | European Stars | 2002 | Festival Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:GTS Constellation - Celebrity Cruises - RCCL.JPG | frameless]] | Constellation | 2002 | Celebrity Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Coral Princess (12385825364).jpg | frameless]] | Coral Princess | 2003 | Princess Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Lirica Mallorca.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Lirica | 2003 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Navío Island Princess, Skagway, Alaska, Estados Unidos, 2017-08-26, DD 39.jpg | frameless]] | Island Princess | 2003 | Princess Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Crystal Serenity, River Mersey (geograph 4593084).jpg | frameless]] | Crystal Serenity | 2003 | Crystal Cruises | Laid up | |||||||||||
| [[File:Queen Mary 2 05 KMJ.jpg | frameless]] | Queen Mary 2 | 2004 | Cunard Line | In Service | Floated in 2003, is the longest, tallest, widest, and the largest ocean liner, and at the time of her construction, the largest passenger ship, and is currently the only ship to undergo regularly scheduled transatlantic crossings. | ||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Opera.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Opera | 2004 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Musica in Dubrovnik.JPG | frameless]] | MSC Musica | 2006 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Orchestra Santorini.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Orchestra | 2007 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Poesia 02.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Poesia | 2008 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC FANTASIA 2160.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Fantasia | 2008 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Splendida Marseille (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | MSC Splendida | 2009 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:NORWEGIAN EPIC.jpg | frameless]] | Norwegian Epic | 2010 | Norwegian Cruise Line | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Magnifica 2013.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Magnifica | 2010 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MS MSC Divina, Port Canaveral, Florida.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Divina | 2012 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Preziosa in Kiel.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Preziosa | 2013 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MS Europa 2--2.jpg | frameless]] | Europa 2 | 2013 | Hapag & Lloyd | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Harmony of the Seas (ship, 2016) 001 (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Harmony of the Seas | 2016 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Meraviglia in Honnigsvåg.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Meraviglia | 2017 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:SymphonyOfTheSeas (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Symphony of the Seas | 2018 | Royal Caribbean Cruise Line | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Celebrity Edge - Sept 2018 (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Celebrity Edge | 2018 | Celebrity Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Bellissima 20190226 190521 (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | MSC Bellissima | 2019 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Vertrek MSC GRANDIOSA (49018550362).jpg | frameless]] | MSC Grandiosa | 2019 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Celebrity Apex.jpg | frameless]] | Celebrity Apex | 2020 | Celebrity Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Virtuosa, Saint-Nazaire september 2020.jpg | center | frameless]] | MSC Virtuosa | 2021 | MSC Cruises | In Service | ||||||||||
| [[File:Wonder of the Seas in Málaga Port 01 (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Wonder of the Seas | 2021 | Royal Caribbean International | In service | World's third largest cruise ship as of 2024 (236,857 GT) | ||||||||||
| [[File:Celebrity BEYOND La Rochelle.jpg | frameless]] | Celebrity Beyond | 2022 | Celebrity Cruises | In service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC World Europa - Saint-Nazaire - June 2022.jpg | frameless]] | MSC World Europa | 2022 | MSC Cruises | In Service | First in new class of MSC vessels | ||||||||||
| [[File:MSC Euribia leaving Kiel 23.jpg | frameless]] | MSC Euribia | 2023 | MSC Cruises | In Service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Celebrity Ascent construit par les Chantiers de l'Atlantique (cropped).jpg | frameless]] | Celebrity Ascent | 2023 | Celebrity Cruises | In service | |||||||||||
| [[File:Utopia of the Seas La Rochelle-b.jpg | frameless]] | Utopia of the Seas | 2024 | Royal Caribbean International | In Service | First LNG powered ship of the class | ||||||||||
| [[File:Ritzcarlton Ilma.jpg | frameless]] | Ilma | 2024 | Ritz Carlton Yacht Collection | In service | |||||||||||
| [[File:MSC World America.jpg | frameless]] | MSC World America | 2025 | MSC Cruises | In service | |||||||||||
| Luminara | 2025 | Ritz Carlton Yacht Collection | In service | |||||||||||||
| [[File:Celebrity Xcel at Port Everglades 2025-11-05.jpg | frameless]] | Celebrity Xcel | 2025 | Celebrity Cruises | In service |
Other ships built at the yard

-
- Four sloops, designed as seaplane tenders, but built as convoy escorts. all launched in 1940.
- Belle Abeto - Built in 1952 as LAENNEC 66 BELLE ABETO passenger/cargo ship.
- s - Four ships launched (1976–1979)
- and MV Nestor - Two LNG carriers built in 1975–1977 for the Dutch NSU (later Nedlloyd) and Ocean Group (later owned by Bonny Gas Transport). The large drydock, which was later used for the Queen Mary 2, was specially built for the building of supertankers in the 1970s, among which were these two ships. The drydock was never used again until the Queen Mary 2 was being built.
-
- A part of it was launched in 2008.
- Russian amphibious assault ship Vladivostok (launched 2013) - Later purchased by Egypt.
- Russian amphibious assault ship Sevastopol (launched 2014) - Later purchased by Egypt.
Future ships on order
| Ships on order | Ship name (as built) | Delivery date | Built for | Tonnage | Current status | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSC World Asia | 2026 | MSC Cruises | 205,700 | title=MSC dubs its fourth World-class ship the World Atlantic | url=https://www.travelweekly.com/Cruise-Travel/MSC-begins-work-on-next-cruise-ship-World-Atlantic | access-date=2025-11-21 | website=www.travelweekly.com | language=en}} | ||
| Corinthian | 2026 | Orient Express | 30,000 | Ordered | ||||||
| Olympian | 2027 | Orient Express | 30,000 | Ordered | ||||||
| MSC World Atlantic | 2027 | MSC Cruises | 205,700 | Ordered | ||||||
| (Unnamed Oasis Class) | 2028 | Royal Caribbean International | 231,000 | Ordered | ||||||
| Celebrity Xcite | 2028 | Celebrity Cruises | 140,600 | Ordered | ||||||
| (MSC World Class 5) | 2028 | MSC Cruises | 205,700 | date=2025-11-12 | title=MSC CROCIERE: NUOVO ORDINE PER 2 NAVI WORLD CLASS | url=https://www.mscpressarea.com/en_INT/it_IT/press-releases/msc-crociere-nuovo-ordine-da-3-5-miliardi-di-euro-per-altre-due-navi-della-world/ | access-date= | website=www.mscpressarea.com | language=it-IT}} | |
| (MSC World Class 6) | 2029 | MSC Cruises | 205,700 | Ordered | ||||||
| (MSC World Class 7) | 2030 | MSC Cruises | 205,700 | Ordered | ||||||
| (MSC World Class 8) | 2031 | MSC Cruises | 205,700 | Ordered |
References
References
- "2024 Non-financial performance statement". Chantiers de l'Atlantique.
- "2023 Non-financial performance statement". Chantiers de l'Atlantique.
- "History".
- "SS France, SS Norway".
- "Megastructures: Queen Mary 2".
- (12 March 2015). "Discovery Knowledge Building The Queen Mary 2 PART1 [Documentary] FreeHDFilms".
- (2003-11-15). "Inquiry into cruise liner deaths". BBC News.
- "Aker Yards and Alstom Marine Complete Transaction". Asdnews.com.
- "Aker Yards and Alstom Marine plan to join forces". Alstom.com.
- (3 September 2008). "Aker Yards to be renamed STX Europe". Reuters.
- (June 2012). "2012 Investment Climate Statement - France".
- "Saint-Nazaire : Retour du nom "Les Chantiers de l'Atlantique"".
- Vincent Groizeleau. (2022-11-03). "Saint-Nazaire : le THP est entré en service avec le montage du Celebrity Ascent".
- Baul, Patrick J.. (2003). "Half Century of Cruise Ships in Saint-Nazaire". Coop Breizh Publications.
- "RCYC Luminara".
- "Celebrity Xcel delivered, Xcite construction begins".
- (2011-01-06). "Cruise Ship Orderbook".
- "MSC dubs its fourth World-class ship the World Atlantic".
- "OE Corinthian".
- "Orient Express Olympian keel is laid".
- "IT’S OFFICIAL: ROYAL CARIBBEAN’S SEVENTH OASIS CLASS VACATION BEGINS CONSTRUCTION".
- "Celebrity Cruises is getting a sixth Edge-class ship".
- (2025-11-12). "MSC CROCIERE: NUOVO ORDINE PER 2 NAVI WORLD CLASS".
- "MSC Spends $4B for Two New Cruise Ships at Chantiers de l'Atlantique".
- (2025-11-12). "MSC CRUISES ANNOUNCES TWO NEW WORLD CLASS SHIP ORDERS DURING DOUBLE CELEBRATION WITH CHANTIERS DE L’ATLANTIQUE".
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