Yachts International

“Later my surname opened some doors, but frst I had to learn to stand up on my own. Only then could I stand on my father’s shoulders. ”

—Bill H. Tripp III, “Designer Genes”

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Bernardo Zuccon is also the architect son of architects Giovanni Zuccon and Paola Galeazzi (the sister of designer Carlo Galeazzi, who coincident­ally was charged with revamping the Akhir range before Cantieri di Pisa closed its doors). Giovanni and Paola are founders of Zuccon Internatio­nal Project in Rome, where Bernardo works as head of design alongside his parents and his sister, Martina, in the studio that has produced dozens of series and full-custom designs for the Ferretti Group and CRN in particular, including 262-foot (80-meter) Chopi Chopi and the recent 164-foot (50-meter) Teseo explorer concept. Bernardo grew up reading yachting magazines instead of children’s comics and, like Tommaso Spadolini, credits his family background for his design sense.

“It was impossible for me to be indifferen­t to the work of my parents, to whom I owe any predisposi­tion for design,” Bernardo says. In addition to his own architectu­ral studies, his parents’ infuence has instilled the conviction that yachts are much more than objects designed to move on the water; they are complex living spaces that require a delicate balance between form and function.

As to whether being the son of a renowned designer is a boost or a burden, Bernardo is of two minds. “People always ask, ‘Will he be as good as his dad?’ So there is undoubtedl­y pressure to perform,” he says. “The trick is to transform that pressure into a determinat­ion to succeed by

identifyin­g the goals and objectives you want to achieve. Overall, I would say that the pros outweigh the cons, not least because I’m lucky enough to have a maestro by my side, which is a huge advantage.”

It is a pressure that Dickie Bannenberg knows all too well. His father set the bar as high as it could go by creating a string of iconic superyacht­s in a career that spanned four decades. Dickie, struggling to manage the business on his own after Jon died in 2002, lured Simon Rowell away from a career in the residentia­l and hotel sector to form Bannenberg & Rowell. Rather than emulate his father’s accomplish­ments, Dickie has built on the family reputation by leading the studio into what he calls a “post-Jon era.”

“Having the Bannenberg surname has not been unhelpful,” admits Dickie, who recently published a revealing—and beautifull­y designed—biography of his father. “But the sheer toughness of the act to follow meant that there was some pretty close scrutiny, not to mention skepticism, about what was going to emerge from the studio in the post-Jon era. You are really only as good as your last job, which is what matters more than the name. But, of course, I am very conscious of the legacy that needs to be upheld—even more so after spending fve years preparing the book on Jon.”

It took awhile for the rebranded studio to fnd its feet. The team started with reft projects such as 170-foot (52-meter) Feadship Illusion and 111-foot (34-meter) Blue Bird, the 1938 motoryacht once owned by Malcolm Campbell, the former British holder of the speed record on both land and water. Illusion, in particular, mapped the studio’s future direction by doing away with the heavy onyx, maple and burl, replacing them with dark oak, brushed nickel and a dazzling white color scheme. Since then, Bannenberg & Rowell has developed an eclectic interior style on yachts as diverse as Predator, Natori, Pacifc, Kaiser, Aurelia and Galactica Star that owes much to Jon’s pioneering approach. Judging from a burgeoning order book, today’s owners share the studio’s penchant for hexagonal and elliptical shapes, furniture units that split or divide to create multifunct­ional areas, boldly juxtaposed wood grains and a general distrust of overtly traditiona­l materials.

“Even if the brief is for a deliberate­ly knocked-back interior, I think you have to take a bit of a risk, which I suppose is a Bannenberg trait inherited from my dad,” Dickie says.

While Europe continues to produce the most infuential designers of large motoryacht­s, American Bill H. Tripp III has cornered a healthy slice of the market for super sailing yachts with designs such as Mystere, Esence, Alithia, Saudade and Better Place. Among his current projects is a 170-foot (52-meter) Ice Class schooner and a 279-foot (85-meter) ketch, both in the Netherland­s, where he has a subsidiary offce. Tripp spent his childhood on the water sailing and racing the fast and beautiful boats designed by his father, William H. Tripp, Jr.

“There was no pressure for me to become a yacht designer, but there was plenty of example,” Bill says. “From the age of 6, my dad was taking me to yards like Hinckley, Abeking & Rasmussen and De Vries Lentsch, which created a kind of design wanderlust in me.”

While growing up in the world of sail attuned him to the sea and seamanship, Bill believes that today’s sailing yachts are so different from the Bermuda 40, Block Island 40, Columbia 50 and other designs by his father—not least in terms of sheer size—that if there has been an exchange of genetic informatio­n, it has undergone a signifcant mutation. When his father died in 1971, Bill was still in high school, so the gap was such that it took “a bootstrap effort” to make a name for himself.

“Later my surname opened some doors, but frst I had to learn to stand up on my own,” says the Connecticu­t-based designer. “Only then could I stand on my father’s shoulders.”

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