China Daily (Hong Kong)

A project with a titanic goal: recreating the Titanic

- Contact the writer at williamhen­nelly@chinadaily.com.cn

Will Leonardo Di Caprio and Kate Winslet lend some glamour to the launch?

Aerial images were published last week on the progress of a trueto-scale replica of the ill-fated Titanic ocean liner under constructi­on on a riverbank in Southwest China’s Sichuan province.

Easily the world’s most famous shipwreck, the Titanic was the largest passenger ship in the world in the 1910s and was designed to be “unsinkable”.

The 1997 eponymous movie, a fictionali­zed retelling of the Titanic’s tragic sinking in 1912, is arguably just as famous. Starring romantic leads Di Caprio and Winslet, Titanic won 11 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and is enormously popular in China.

In 2014, Bernard Hill, who portrayed Titanic Captain Edward Smith in James Cameron’s film, attended a news conference in Hong Kong, where he was named the new ship’s honorary captain.

It was the big-screen version of Titanic that inspired Seven Star Energy Investment CEO Su Shaojun to invest 1 billion yuan ($149.5 million) to create a 21st century Titanic.

Wuchang Shipbuildi­ng Industry Group is constructi­ng the replica at the Romandisea Seven Star Internatio­nal Cultural Tourism Resort, on a bank of the Qijiang River in Suining, Sichuan.

GC Tech, a Los Angeles company, was hired to design the ship.

“I thought rebuilding the Titanic would be meaningful,” Su told NPR last year. “It was very touching to see people give others the chance to live.

“We Chinese can turn a bad thing into a good thing,” he said.

“We want to let people learn from history.”

In researchin­g this column, I found that China Daily has published at least 10 stories since 2013 about Su’s plans, probably because the ship’s completion date kept getting pushed back. It was supposed to be finished in 2017; now the talk is this year or next.

Su’s company originally promised a “hitting the iceberg experience”, where visitors could experience what it’s like to be on a sinking ship. But it shelved the idea after descendant­s of survivors objected.

“We might still do that,” Su told NPR, “but we won’t call it ‘hitting the iceberg’. We just want to show that people should let women and children go first when facing a disaster.”

Su told The Straits Times in 2016 that “after the RMS Titanic sank, nobody saw its complete set of blueprints. Many blueprint fragments found their way into the hands of collectors or remained missing. We spent many years collecting the blueprints from many parts of the world and managed to obtain most of them.”

The original Titanic was 269 meters long and 28 meters wide. The replica will include banquet halls, a gymnasium, a swimming pool, Turkish baths, a theater and a copy of the original engine.

It also will feature ballroom dancing and Las Vegas-style entertainm­ent.

Rooms on the ship will cost from 3,000 yuan a night for a cabin to 100,000 yuan for luxury accommodat­ions.

When I first read about Su’s plan, it brought to mind a story I had written about abandoned shopping malls in the United States and China, and how some of them were being repurposed. There is a sprawling, vacant shopping mall in Shanghai shaped like the Pentagon, the headquarte­rs of the US Department of Defense.

Although a Chinese government directive in 2016 called for a halt to “oversized” and “weird” architectu­re, I don’t think the Titanic replica falls into that category.

It should prove to be an attraction not just in China but for people around the world, in particular movie buffs.

The original RMS Titanic was a British passenger ocean liner that hit an iceberg and sank in the North Atlantic on April 15, 1912, on her maiden voyage from Southampto­n, England, to New York City.

Of the more than 2,200 passengers on board, some 1,500 perished in the tragedy.

Some of the world’s wealthiest people were on board, including John Jacob Astor IV, great grandson of the founder of the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York, which incidental­ly was purchased in 2014 by Chinese insurance giant Anbang, which since has run into financial difficulti­es.

It wasn’t until 1985 that the Titanic’s remains were found in two pieces on the ocean floor.

“Romandisea will … become a world-class tourist destinatio­n with a noble soul and spiritual pursuit,” the Daily Express in London quoted Su as saying in a recent story.

 ??  ?? William Hennelly Second Thoughts
William Hennelly Second Thoughts

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