SS Emerald

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The Emerald in 2008
Career
Name: SS The Emerald
Owner: Louis Cruise Lines
Operator: Thomson Holidays
Port of registry: Cyprus
Builder: Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, Newport News, Virginia,
Cost: US $25 million
Launched: 1958
In service: 1958, as Santa Rosa
1992, as Regent Rainbow
1995, as Emerald
1997, as The Emerald
2010, as Emerald
Status: Not SOLAS 2010 compliant, laid up
General characteristics
Type: Ocean liner
Tonnage: 26,431 gross register tons (GRT)
Length: 182.57 m (599 ft 0 in)
Beam: 25.6 m (84 ft 0 in)
Speed: 17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph)
Capacity: 1,198 passengers
Crew: 412 officers and crew

SS Emerald is a cruise ship owned by the Cyprus-based shipping company Louis Cruise Lines. She was built in 1958 by the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company in Newport News, Virginia, USA for Grace Lines as SS Santa Rosa. Between 1992 and 1995, she sailed for Regency Cruises as SS Regent Rainbow and between 1997 and 2008, she sailed for Thomson Cruises under its present name. As of 2007 she is the only passenger liner built at a U.S. shipyard (passenger liners having not been built there since 1958) that is still in service.[1]

History

Santa Rosa and time laid up

The ship was originally launched in 1958 as Santa Rosa, displacing 20,000 gross registered tons. She sailed under this name alongside her sister the SS Santa Paula for 13 years before she was laid up in 1971. [2] She was sold to Vintoro Corp of New York in 1976 and was renamed Samos Sky, to operate South American service once again, but this venture did not eventuate and the ship remained idle. In 1989, she was sold to Coral Cruise Lines and towed to Greece that December.

Modernisation

In March 1990, the Samos Sky arrived in Chalkis, Greece to be modernised and Coral Cruises renamed her Pacific Sun, then Diamond Island before selling her to the also Greek Lelakis Group later that year, who substantially rebuilt her at the cost of $70 million. She emerged in 1991, with a brand new superstructure above her unaltered hull, and was barely recognisable, although unusually she kept her steam turbine engines.

Regent Rainbow

Now measuring 26,431 gross tonnes, the ship entered service under Regency Cruises as the popular Regent Rainbow from 1992, until Regency Cruises suffered extensive losses and was declared bankrupt in 1995. The Regent Rainbow was placed under arrest on 27 November of that year and, in December 1996, was sold to the Cyprus-based Louis Cruise Lines and renamed Emerald.

The Emerald

In 1997, the Emerald was chartered to Thomson Cruises (where The was added before her name) to operate cruises for the British market. She soon became the company's most popular ship,[3] and stayed with them until November 2008, when she was dropped in favour of a larger, more modern vessel. She has since been returned to Louis Cruise Lines, however, unless major reconstruction work is carried out on her, she will be withdrawn from service by 1 July 2010, as new SOLAS regulations coming into effect on that date will no longer allow her to be operated. She had been renamed Emerald according to the Louis Cruises website. [1] Louis Cruise Lines has said that Emerald is currently laid up and most likely will not sail again. [4]

Decks

The Emerald has ten decks, all ten of which are accessible to passengers.

  1. Gym, hospital, Kidzone, massage room, sauna, engine room, crew spaces
  2. Outside and inside cabins, engine room, crew spaces
  3. Outside and inside cabins, crew spaces
  4. Outside and inside cabins, beauty salon
  5. Outside and inside cabins, reception
  6. Yacht club bar, Royale lounge, casino, shops, library, Monte Carlo court, Chanterelle dining room, Regency showlounge
  7. Outside and inside cabins
  8. Outside and inside cabins, Le Bistro buffet, swimming pool, lido bar
  9. Starlight lounge, disco, whirlpools
  10. Sun deck (exists in the forward part of the ship only)

References