MS Berlioz

The Côtes des Flandres as Berlioz at Calais before she entered service in August 2012
History
Name:
  • Côte des Flandres (2015-Present)
  • Berlioz (2012-2015)
  • Seafrance Berlioz (2005-2012)
Owner:
  • Euro-Transmanche 3 BE (2012-Present)
  • Seafrance (2005-2012)
Operator:
Port of registry: Calais,  France
Route: Dover - Calais
Builder: Chantiers Atlantique, Saint Nazaire, France
Yard number: 032
Launched: 14 October 2004
In service: 30 March 2005
Identification: IMO number: 9305843
Status: In Service
General characteristics
Tonnage: 33,796 GT
Length: 185.82 m (610 ft)
Beam: 27.7 m (91 ft)
Installed power: 2 x Wärtsilä 8L46B, 2 x Wärtsilä 12V46B diesels, 9,000kW
Speed: 25 kn (46.30 km/h)
Capacity: 1900 passengers, 2000 lane metres (120 lorries or 700 cars)

MS Côte des Flandres is a Ro-Ro Passenger Ferry owned by Euro-Transmanche 3 BE and operated by DFDS Seaways France between Dover and Calais, the ship was the second to be built for SeaFrance in 2005, she entered service with SeaFrance in March 2005 and finished with SeaFrance in January 2012 when the company was liquidated.

She was sold to Euro-Transmanche 3 BE (Eurotunnel) in July 2012 and was renamed Berlioz, re-entering service between Dover and Calais in August 2012 with MyFerryLink. She was further renamed Côte des Flandres[1] for service on the Dover to Calais route with DFDS Seaways France starting in early 2016. [2]

Service

The SeaFrance Berlioz carried out up to ten English Channel crossings per day with SeaFrance, initially in an advertised time of 70 minutes each. In total, there are 11 decks. When in SeaFrance service the passenger areas accounted for the upper two decks, with the lower decks used for the vehicles. The passenger area included a retail space and children's play area. The retail area covered around 500m² and included a boutique and a shopping area offering clothes, cosmetics, confectionery, beer, wines and spirits. There was also a newspaper kiosk, bureau de change and information desk. On board, there were six bars and restaurants. The Latitudes café bar and the Le Parisien café were located in the ship's bow - the former on the upper deck and the latter on the lower deck. The Latitudes could seat 260 passengers with waiter service for 60 and the Le Parisien café could accommodate 350 diners. The other areas were the Relais self-service restaurant, the la Brasserie Restaurant, the Le Pub bar, which had seating for 400 people, and a commercial driver's restaurant catering for 160 people. The Relais was situated at the stern and overlooks the children's play area. It had seating for 350 customers.[3]

Lay-up and incidents

Between 16 November 2011 and 20 August 2012 she was laid up in Calais Port, due to the commercial court ordering that SeaFrance be liquidated. During her time laid up in Calais, she was involved in a collision with another vessel within the port vicinity. During a gale, with winds of around 50 knots, she parted her moorings and drifted across the water towards the cable vessel Île de Batz owned by the Louis Dreyfus Group. Damage was sustained to her starboard bridge wing which resulted in shattered windows and crushed roofing. Minimal damage was caused to the Île de Batz, which later departed for a nearby port for quick repairs. A tug owned by the Port of Calais was soon on the scene to assist. She resumed service with MyFerryLink on 20 August 2012, dropping SeaFrance from her name.

On the 27 October 2012 the Pride of Burgundy collided with Berlioz resulting in damage to her lifeboats, which meant the ship had to be pulled out of service. The Pride of Burgundy sustained damage to her right bridge wing which was fixed in a couple of hours. All passengers due to travel on the Berlioz were transferred to her sister-ship Rodin.[4]

Manoeuvrability

Manoeuvrability is important for a vessel having to make 20 port movements a day. To assist in manoeuvring at port, the vessel has four transverse thrusters, three in the bow and one in the stern. The Wärtsilä thrusters are rated at 1,800 kW each. The propellers and thrusters can be controlled individually, with the aid of a joystick, or simultaneously. It can berth in wind speeds of 50 knots without tug assistance.[5]

Sister ship

MS Côte des Dunes (ex. Seafrance Rodin)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.