USA TODAY International Edition

Celebrity’s innovative Edge ship has the cruise line looking sharp

- Gene Sloan

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – Celebrity Edge isn’t just another new ship for Celebrity Cruises.

The 2,918-passenger vessel is designed to be transforma­tional for the brand, says president and CEO Lisa Lutoff-Perlo.

“We wanted to really catapult (Celebrity) forward with this new design,” Lutoff-Perlo tells USA TODAY in an exclusive interview in the ship’s soaring Grand Plaza.

Debuting last month at Florida’s Port Everglades, Edge is the prototype for a new class of vessel that will transform not just the line but the industry, LutoffPerlo suggests.

Celebrity already has ordered four of the ships to roll out between now and 2022. The line currently operates nine large ships, not including Edge, and three tiny vessels in the Galapagos.

“We believe there will be a lot of people talking about it,” she says.

Offering a striking profile when seen from a distance, Edge boasts outwardfac­ing cabins that are fronted with wallto-wall, floor-to-ceiling glass – a new concept for ocean cruising made possible by redesignin­g the internal architectu­re of the ship.

“It took a lot of re-engineerin­g (and) ... a lot of different thinking,” Lutoff-Perlo says. “It took a lot of people telling us ‘I don’t think we can do that.’”

Dubbed Edge Staterooms with Infinite Verandas, the new cabins have balconies that are incorporat­ed into the main cabin area. Bi-fold doors in the rooms either can be completely closed, creating a traditiona­l room area separated from a balcony area, or left open, creating a wide-open indoor space that is about 23 percent larger than traditiona­l balcony cabins.

The glass walls at the end of the Infinite Veranda cabins slide down from the ceiling at the push of a button, descending to the level of a traditiona­l balcony to create a balcony-like feel.

Lutoff-Perlo says outfitting Edge with the Infinite Veranda cabins required adding about 2 percent more volume to the vessel.

“That was a big deal,” she says. The creation of the Infinite Veranda cabins was just one of several initiative­s designed to orient Edge to the sea to a greater extent than traditiona­l cruise ships of its size, Lutoff-Perlo says.

Also noteworthy was the creation of a three-deck-high, plant-filled lounge, dining and entertainm­ent venue at the back of the ship called Eden that is partially encircled in glass. Offering unusually wide-open views of the ocean, it’s full of seating nooks facing outward.

Another innovative new feature of Edge is Magic Carpet, a 90-ton platform the size of a tennis court that is cantilever­ed over the ship’s starboard side. Painted tangerine, it moves up and down the side of the vessel serving functions from a lounge to a restaurant to a tender-boarding platform. When used as a lounge or restaurant, it offers stunning views out to sea and back to the main part of the vessel.

Lutoff-Perlo says cruisers are demanding more interactio­n with the sea.

“Everyone tells us the one thing they would like is a closer connection to the sea, and a closer connection to the ports that we visit, which is why we made the ship more outward-facing,” she says.

Lutoff-Perlo notes lounge chairs on the ship’s top decks face toward the ocean and not the inside of the ship as is typical in the industry. It’s a little change that makes a big difference in how passengers experience their surroundin­gs while at sea, she says.

At the top of the ship, another unusual new space, the plant-filled Rooftop Garden, offers passengers a garden-like outdoor venue to watch movies under the stars. It also is home to a grill where passengers can grab a bite.

“All these things that we have done are purposeful in that regard,” she says of the efforts to orient the ship to the sea in a greater way.

The focus on giving passengers more of a connection to the sea was the impetus for Edge’s name. The idea is passengers are taken to the “edge” of the point where the ship meets the ocean like never before.

Edge is Celebrity’s first new ship in six years and the first prototype for a new Celebrity vessel to debut in a decade.

Lutoff-Perlo notes the line went back to the drawing boards for a lot of the ship’s onboard offerings. Nearly every restaurant on Edge – and there are nearly a dozen of them – is a new concept.

Instead of a single large main dining room, Edge offers four smaller main dining rooms, each with its own decor and culinary theme. Named Tuscan, Cosmopolit­an, Normandie and Cyprus, the eateries serve a common menu augmented by a handful of specialty dishes that are unique to each venue. Tuscan serves some Italian dishes, for instance; Normandie’s specials have a contempora­ry French flair.

Lutoff-Perlo notes the theme of each of the four restaurant­s offers a nod to the older ships in the Celebrity fleet. Cosmopolit­an has elements that evoke the main dining rooms on earlier vessels. Tuscan draws inspiratio­n from the Tuscan Grill eateries found on some Celebrity ships. Cyprus, which serves Greek cuisine, is an homage to Celebrity’s Greek heritage.

“We’ve taken much from the fleet,” Lutoff-Perlo says. “Yet we’ve transforme­d the experience­s in a unique way.”

Edge arrived at Florida’s Port Everglades in November after a journey from the shipyard in France.

Edge will sail to the Caribbean out of Port Everglades before moving to the Mediterran­ean for summer 2019.

In the Caribbean, the ship will operate seven-night trips starting at $1,049. In the Mediterran­ean, it’ll mostly offer 10- and 11-night voyages starting at $1,899.

 ?? SEBASTIEN SALOM GOMIS AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Doggone it, that’s a big ship! The French-made cruise ship Celebrity Edge leaves the shipyards of Saint-Nazaire, France, on its way to Miami.
SEBASTIEN SALOM GOMIS AFP/GETTY IMAGES Doggone it, that’s a big ship! The French-made cruise ship Celebrity Edge leaves the shipyards of Saint-Nazaire, France, on its way to Miami.
 ?? MICHEL VERDURE ?? The three-deck-high Eden Lounge at the aft of the Celebrity Edge is filled with plants and boasts nearly wide open views of the sea.
MICHEL VERDURE The three-deck-high Eden Lounge at the aft of the Celebrity Edge is filled with plants and boasts nearly wide open views of the sea.

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