Times Colonist

World’s largest cruise ship arrives at Miami

- VINOD SREEHARSHA

The world’s largest passenger cruise ship reached Miami early Wednesday morning, a longantici­pated arrival expected to further invigorate South Florida’s tourism economy, reinforce the Magic City’s global and national relevance, and potentiall­y expand who takes cruises and why.

Dubbed the Icon of the Seas, the 1,198-foot-long ship with a capacity of 5,610 guests, entered Government Cut close to 7 a.m., meeting its pilot boat, then docking at PortMiami.

Equipped with six undulating water slides in its own adventure theme park, over 40 restaurant­s and drinking establishm­ents including two duelling piano bars, three-storey townhouses for large families, and a breezy park with over 33,000 plants, it hopes to attract a wide variety of travellers.

Icon is decades in the making, the Miami-headquarte­red owner Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal has frequently said. “There are pieces and parts of everything we’ve built over the years that you will find on Icon,” said Jay Schneider, Chief Product Innovation Officer for Royal Caribbean, in an interview with the Herald.

The Icon of the Seas is the first new class of ships from Royal Caribbean in nearly a decade, according to Colleen McDaniel, editor-in-chief of Cruise Critic, an industry publicatio­n owned by Tripadviso­r. Its last new class was the Quantum back in August 2014, she noted.

Weighing more than 250,800 gross tons, having 2,850 staterooms, 18 guest decks, 7 pools, and 2,350 crew, “it is the largest cruise ship in the world now,” said McDaniel.

Miami stands to benefit in some ways since Icon plans to be based at PortMiami year-round.

The ship’s focus for now will be itinerarie­s a week or less, and to the Caribbean. “The ship is really built for those five-day and seven-day itinerarie­s,” said Cruise Critic’s McDaniel. That potentiall­y means several thousand new people visiting Miami each week, many staying a day or two before or after their cruise.

“It’s going to be an economic boon for PortMiami and for the city,” said John Lovell, president of Travel Leaders Group. That includes hoteliers, restaurant­s, ridesharin­g or taxi drivers, and retail shops. “They’re all going to benefit.”

Icon will now prepare for its first cruise for the public, scheduled to depart PortMiami on Jan. 27.

The arrival of Icon will likely add fuel to the already booming cruise industry.

PortMiami, Florida’s largest port, set a record for passengers served in one year, according to data disclosed in December. The port said that 7.3 million passengers travel led in and out during the 12-month fiscal year 2023, which for the cruise industry began Oct. 1, 2022, and ended Sept. 30, 2023.

That was nearly twice the four million passengers seen the prior fiscal year.

Port travel exceeded its previous record of 6.8 million passengers by 7%, which was set in fiscal year 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted one of the most popular vacation industries.

The record activity in the most recent year was reflected in several new ships sailing out of PortMiami, including Oceania’s Vista, Carnival Cruise Line Costa Venezia and Norwegian Cruise Line Norwegian VIVA. Since the pandemic, Norwegian Cruise Line, Carnival Corp. and Virgin Voyages have built new terminals at PortMiami. Royal Caribbean Group has a new one expected to open in late 2027.

Meanwhile, Fort Lauderdale’s Port Everglades is also growing. Last November, Disney Cruise Line started sailing from there, the start of a minimum 15-year agreement between the two. Port Canaveral is, too. Just one season ago it was the world’s busiest cruise port.

Notably, all this growth comes despite rising ticket prices. According to Cruise Critic, the average minimum cost of a fivenight cruise from the United States to the Caribbean, Bahamas and Bermuda last December was $736, a 37% increase from December 2022. That’s 10 times the 3.7% inflation rate in the United States during the 12-month period ending in September.

This is a remarkable shift from only a few years ago. The coronaviru­s pandemic shut down the cruise industry for over a year starting in March 2020 due to outbreaks on ships. Some passengers were initially stranded at sea, and many struggled to get any type of refund or credit for aborted trips.

Yet the cruise industry has staged a strong comeback. It’s even seeing nearly sold-out sailings for many of the longest voyages leaving through early 2024. People are paying $25,000 to over $100,000 to sail around the world for several months.

And now, Royal Caribbean is giving the cruise industry a big spark.

The Icon has been a long time in the making, its creation going back to at least 2017.

The general plan for the ship and arrangemen­t of decks were all locked in by 2018. The design of the interiors and the number of rooms were finalized by 2019.

Work then shifted to the Meyer Turku shipyard in Turku, Finland, the shipyard Royal Caribbean hired and has long worked with.

Constructi­on broke ground with steel cutting in June 2021. Liquefied natural gas tanks were installed two months later.

It was last June when initial sea trials began. After concluding in November, Meyer Turku delivered the ship to Royal Caribbean.

It then sailed to Cadiz, Spain to get finishing touches and more than 33,500 real plants in its Central Park and then headed to Puerto Rico.

Cruise specialist­s not affiliated with the carrier seem to be impressed.

“What they did with the ship is took it up many, many notches,” said David Crooks, senior vice-president of product and operations at World Travel Holdings, a Wakefield, Massachuse­tts-based global cruise and travel agency.

He had been bothered by the cabins and rooms on Royal Caribbean’s other ships but said the ones on Icon “are more comfortabl­e and accessible for families.”

Crooks visited Icon at the shipyard in Finland in August.

With this ship, Royal Caribbean seems to be tapping into people who have already cruised to the Caribbean and have tired of it.

The destinatio­n of a cruise is a key driver in people choosing to go on one. But the Icon is so massive, that for many, “the ship itself is a destinatio­n,” said McDaniel. Meaning, people may opt to stay on the ship the whole trip.

Lovell thinks the Icon could spur a lot of innovation in the sector, particular­ly for big ships.

The Icon “gives you this open sense of space. You don’t feel confined,” he said.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL, EL NUEVO HERALD ?? Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas, the world’s largest cruise ship, heads to the dock early Wednesday morning in Miami.
PEDRO PORTAL, EL NUEVO HERALD Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas, the world’s largest cruise ship, heads to the dock early Wednesday morning in Miami.

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