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QM 2 Year
2025 QM 2 Year 2024 Deck Plans 150,000 Gross Tonnage Features, Size, Activities, and Lineage |
All Luxury World Cruise Itineraries QM2 Art On Board Champagne Bar On Board Design Highlights The Original Whistle |
Cunard Queen Mary 2 2,620 to 3,090 Privileged Guests A SHIP OF SUPERLATIVE COMPARISONS Click for Comparisons to Britannia, QM1 |
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Cunard's newest ocean liner, Queen Mary 2, is the largest, longest, tallest and widest passenger ship ever conceived. It is fitting that this should be so, because Cunard Line has a long tradition of creating ships that command the superlative in comparison to all others. Standing beside this majestic ship at quayside, visitors behold a structure as tall as a 23-story building. She is over a hundred feet longer than the Eiffel Tower is tall, and over four city blocks in length. If she were afloat in the pool at the foot of Niagara Falls, her stack would rise over 20 feet above the rim. |
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For over 60 years, there has been a Cunard "Queen" sailing the oceans. Queen Mary 2 is the first such liner built in a generation and is the worthy heir to the company's 160-year heritage. She embodies all the thoroughbred characteristics of her forebears: the generous thrust of her raked prow, the stepped superstructure, both fore and aft, the lean dimensions that allow for greyhound speed whilst traversing the North Atlantic. Seen from the outside, she looks like what she is: a purpose-built craft for sailing rapidly between points on the globe. Within her hull, however, QM2 hides a multitude of delights as spectacular and pleasurable as they are innovative and ingenious. Stepping aboard, guests enter a realm of sweeping spaces and grand designs, the likes of which have not been seen for decades. Passengers will enjoy a generosity of spaciousness that rivals or surpasses that of ultra-luxury small ships. Just 2,620 guests sail on this 150,000-gross-ton vessel. They stroll the broad, one-third-mile-long teak promenade deck that encircles the entire ship, stopping to talk with friends relaxing on traditional steamer chairs. Guests enter a lobby that towers over three decks high, graced with a sweeping grand staircase and monumental works of art. They will travel in that vary from the merely commodious to the shamelessly extravagant. The standard cabins measure 194 square feet, and most include an eight-foot balcony. In all, three fourths of the ship's cabins have balconies, and 77% are sea-view cabins. All the way aft, there are five Duplex Apartments overlooking the sea from two-story glass walls. At over 1,600 square feet, these include two levels, a private exercise area, a generous private balcony, and butler service. As on QE2, the accommodation selected by the guest will be matched with a sea-view dining venue. Higher categories will dine in grill rooms, and lower categories will share a truly opulent dining room, again towering over three decks high, with its own grand staircase and tiered seating to create both open and intimate dining spaces. To fill the pleasant days at sea, onboard activities are staged in a number of innovative and inviting venues. Seven multi-purpose classroom facilities that can be sized to accommodate differently sized classes will comprise a College At Sea, with expert instruction in a wide variety of subjects, such as computer skills, languages, art and wine appreciation, cooking, and more. An auditorium features a section that adapts to become a full-scale planetarium, where star shows, courses on celestial navigation, and other visual spectacles are presented. QM2 will have a large library, a bookshop, and a coffee shop. Like her sister QE2, QM2 will boast a true ballroom, with an orchestra for dancing. A magnificent Spa will include one of the ship's five swimming pools, and together with the adjacent Winter Garden, will provide a health, fitness, and relaxation area of over 25,000 square feet. Numerous smaller lounges, alternative dining venues, and specialized rooms will also welcome travelers during oceanic crossings and other fascinating voyages. QM2 was built in the Alstom Chantiers de L'Atlantique shipyard in Sainte-Nazaire, France. This is the same yard that built the France (now the Norway), Normandie, Ile de France and some of the other great liners of the past. At a total estimated cost of $780 million USD, she will also be the most expensive ship ever built. She entered service in January 2004. Veuve Clicquot Champagne, Canyon Ranch Spa, Specialty Restaurants, 5 Pools, Shops and Boutiques, Children's Programs. In addition to the elegant Veuve Clicquot Champagne Bar, QM2 has the first and only spa at sea operated by the world-famous Canyon Ranch health resorts; the world’s first and only planetarium at sea; the largest ballroom at sea; the largest library at sea; the largest wine cellar at sea, and 10 different dining venues, including the first and only shipboard restaurant by popular American chef Todd English. There are several other lounges and showrooms, a two-story theatre, a casino, 5 indoor and outdoor swimming pools, hot tubs, boutiques, a pet kennel, and a children’s facility, complete with British nannies. |
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