MS Mega Smeralda
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MS Color Festival at Oslofjord |
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Career | |
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Name: | 1985-1992: Svea 1992-1994: Silja Karneval 1994-2008: Color Festival 2008-present: Mega Smeralda |
Namesake: | Mother Svea (original name) |
Owner: | 1985-1987: Johnson Line 1987-1994: Svea Line (Finland) 1994-2008: Color Line 2008-present: Medinvest |
Operator: | 1985-1994: Silja Line 1994-2008: Color Line 2008-present: Corsica Ferries |
Builder: | Wärtsilä Helsinki New Shipyard, Finland |
Yard number: | 470 |
Launched: | 28 September 1984 |
Sponsored by: | Birgit Nilsson |
Christened: | 28 September 1984 |
Acquired: | 7 May 1985 |
In service: | May 1985 |
Refit: | March-April 1992 December 2004-January 2005 |
Homeport: | 1985-1994: Stockholm, Sweden 1994-2008: Oslo, Norway 2008-present: Genoa, Italy |
Status: | In service |
Notes: | Sister ship of M/S Silja Festival |
General characteristics (as built)[1] | |
Tonnage: | 33829 GRT |
Displacement: | 4150 metric tons of deadweight (DWT) |
Length: | 168.03 m (551.28 ft) |
Beam: | 27.60 m (90.55 ft) |
Draught: | 6.70 m (21.98 ft) |
Ice class: | 1 A Super |
Installed power: | 4 × Wärtsilä-Pielstick 12PC-6V diesels combined 26200 kW |
Speed: | 22 knots |
Capacity: | 1803 passengers 1625 passenger beds 400 cars |
General characteristics (currently)[1] | |
Tonnage: | 34694 GRT |
Length: | 168.45 m (552.66 ft) |
Beam: | 27.60 m (90.55 ft) |
Draught: | 6.70 m (21.98 ft) |
Ice class: | 1 A Super |
Installed power: | 4 × Wärtsilä-Pielstick 12PC-6V diesels combined 26200 kW |
Speed: | 22 knots |
Capacity: | 2000 passengers 1933 passenger beds[2] 330 cars[2] 850 lanemeters[2] |
M/S Mega Smeralda is a cruiseferry owned by Medinvest and operated by Corsica Ferries. She was built in 1985 by Wärtsilä at the Helsinki New Shipyard in Helsinki, Finland for Johnson Line as M/S Svea for use in Silja Line traffic. Between 1992 and 1994 she sailed for Silja Line as M/S Silja Karneval, and between 1994 and 2008 for Color Line as M/S Color Festival.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Silja Line service
M/S Svea and her sister M/S Wellamo were modeled after Silja Line's highly successful Helsinki—Stockholm service ferries M/S Finlandia and M/S Silvia Regina. The main difference to the older pair of ships was outer appearance of the new sisters: where Finlandia and her sister had had a very box-like exterior, the new sisters for the Turku—Stockholm route had more attractive rounded looks.
In 1989 there were plans to rebuild Svea with rails on the cardeck so that she could also carry railroad carriages on board, but these were shelved. Until 1990 her funnel displayed the colours of Johnson Line, but at that time Silja Line's owners Johnson Line and Effoa merged into one company, EffJohn, and Silja Line's seal logo was moved from the ship's hulls into their funnels.
In 1992 Svea and her sister underwent a large-scale reconstruction at Lloyd Werft in Bremerhaven, Germany where most of the ships' interiors were rebuilt, a new skybar added on deck 9, a new more blue-dominated colour scheme replaced the traditional Silja stripes and the ship was renamed Silja Karneval in accordance with Silja's new name policy. In fact the funds used to rebuild Svea and Wellamo were originally meant for rebuilding of the GTS Finnjet, but her planned rebuilding would have been too expensive and EffJohn opted to spend what money they had on Svea and Wellamo instead.
[edit] Color Line service
Silja Karneval's service on Silja proved to be short. In early 1994 EffJohn decided to sell her sister Silja Festival to Norway-based Color Line. However, when time came to deliver the ship to Color Line, EffJohn for some reason decided to sell them Silja Karneval instead (the two ships being structurally identical). Problematically for Color Line, they had already printed material advertising their new ship as the Color Festival. As result Silja Karneval became M/S Color Festival, not Color Karneval as would have been logical.
After reconstruction at Cityvarvet, Gothenburg, Color Festival was initially placed on the Oslo—Hirtshals route. In 2002 she damaged one of her rudders in Hirsthals and had to be docked in Hamburg because of it. In April 2006 she started operating on the Oslo—Fredrikshavn route in direct competition with her old Silja Line fleetmate MS Stena Saga. On 21 November 2007 Color Line sold Color Festival to Corsica Ferries for €49 million (400 million Norwegian krone),[3] in preparation for the delivery of the new Color Superspeed vessels in mid-2008.
[edit] Corsica Ferries service
The Color Festival was delivered to Corsica Ferries in early January 2008, subsequently renamed Mega Smeralda and re-flagged in Italy with Genoa as her homeport.[1] Reportedly she will be placed on Civitavecchia—Golfo Aranci service.[4]
[edit] Onboard
[edit] Restaurants & Cafés
- Captains Grill
- Casa Margharita
- Trattoria Riviera
- Buffet Veranda
- Cafè Maritim
[edit] Activities
- Color NetCafè
- Fontana Poolarea
- Cinema
- Color Land
[edit] Bars, Nightclubs & Entertainment
- Panorama Bar
- Casino Bar
- Dancing Palace
- Sailors Pub
- Fun Fun Nightclub
[edit] Shopping
- Tax Free Supermarket
- Color Shop
- Fashion Shop
- Perfume Shop
[edit] Conference
- Color Conference Center
[edit] References
- ^ a b c (Swedish) Fakta om Fartyg: M/S Svea (1985), retrieved 1. 8. 2007
- ^ a b c (Norwegian) Color Line: Color Festival fakta, retrieved 30. 11. 2007
- ^ (Norwegian) Color Line selger Color Festival for 400 mill kroner. Color Line press release (21 November 2007). Retrieved on 2007-11-21.
- ^ (Finnish) Jani Nousiainen (29 November 2007). Color Festival myyty. FCBS Forum. Retrieved on 2007-11-30.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Color Line (Company website)
- M/S Svea (1985) at Fakta om Fartyg (Swedish)
Preceded by M/S Scandinavia |
World's Largest Cruiseferry 1985 |
Succeeded by M/S Mariella |