Times Colonist

Norwegian gets OK for new Miami terminal

- CHABELI HERRERA

MIAMI — A sleek new terminal proposed by Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings at PortMiami officially got the green light to begin constructi­on.

The Miami-based cruise company and Miami-Dade County have reached an agreement for the terminal, settling on a location east of the existing Terminals B and C. That puts the new Norwegian terminal just west of Terminal A, where Royal Caribbean Cruises is building its new PortMiami terminal, too.

The new Norwegian terminal, in conjunctio­n with the cruise company’s current location at Terminals B and C, will give Norwegian the space to berth two 5,000-passenger ships at once. The terminal is slated for completion by early November 2019 — just in time for the arrival of Norwegian’s newest ship, Norwegian Encore.

The increased ship capacity will create about 155 new direct, full-time jobs, the county said.

Norwegian also has guaranteed Miami-Dade it will see a minimum of 1.3 million passengers passing through annually, according to the agreement. That will generate about $24 million US in gross revenues beginning in fiscal year 2018 and increase by three per cent each consecutiv­e year.

Miami-Dade County will pay $100 million for the project, while Norwegian will cover the design, engineerin­g and other costs for a maximum of $65 million.

The design for the terminal, though, has caused controvers­y. The cruise company persuaded county officials to kill the original winning bid for the design of the terminal and instead allow Norwegian to choose its own design and constructi­on firms. Norwegian claimed the county was choosing a firm that would be friendlier to the county’s bottom line — the winning bid proposed an $81-million design, not $100 million — but at the expense of the esthetic appeal of the building.

The final design for the building, by Miami-based Bermello Ajamil & Partners, is an all-glass, 166,500-square-foot terminal to be dubbed the “Pearl of Miami.” The oblong building will have a connecting parking garage with 1,000 parking spaces.

Norwegian president and CEO Frank Del Rio said in a statement that the company is hoping to create a “modern and innovative terminal that will soon welcome guests to a premium experience that begins even before they embark and fully immerse themselves in what it means to cruise with Norwegian.”

Once completed, the new Norwegian terminal will be known as Terminal B; the existing Terminals B and C will become Terminal C. Norwegian will still be able to use Terminal C, but as part of the agreement, it will give up preferenti­al berthing rights on Saturdays and Sundays.

That change will open the port for additional cruise business at Terminal C.

Groundbrea­king for the new terminal is set for this month.

 ?? BERMELLO AJAMIL AND PARTNERS VIA TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Interior rendering of Norwegian Cruise Line’s new terminal at PortMiami. Groundbrea­king is set for this month and completion is slated for late 2019.
BERMELLO AJAMIL AND PARTNERS VIA TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Interior rendering of Norwegian Cruise Line’s new terminal at PortMiami. Groundbrea­king is set for this month and completion is slated for late 2019.

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