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MS Silja Symphony

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MS Silja Symphony
History
NameMS Silja Symphony
OwnerTallink Group[1]
OperatorSilja Line
Port of registryStockholm, Sweden
RouteHelsinkiMariehamnStockholm
BuilderMasa-Yards Turku New Shipyard, Finland
In service1991
IdentificationIMO number8803769
Statusin active service
General characteristics
TypeCruiseferry
Tonnage58,377 GT
Length203 m (666 ft 0 in)
Beam31.5 m (103 ft 4 in)
Draught7.1 m (23 ft 4 in)
Decks13
Ramps3
Ice class1 A Super
Propulsion4 × Wärtsilä-Vasa 9R46 diesel engines, 32,500 kW (43,583 hp)
Speed23 knots (43 km/h; 26 mph)
Capacity
  • 2,626 passengers (originally), 2,852 (currently)
  • 986 cabins
  • 450 vehicles (950 lane meters)

MS Silja Symphony is a cruiseferry owned by the Estonian shipping company Tallink Group,[2] operated under their Silja Line brand on a route connecting Helsinki, Finland to Stockholm, Sweden via Mariehamn. She was built in 1991 at Masa-Yards Turku New Shipyard, Finland.

History

Interior view of MS Silja Symphony during a Helsinki-Stockholm cruise

While the Silja Symphony was being built the Wärtsilä Marine shipyard went bankrupt, and as a result she was delivered several months behind schedule on 30 May 1991. On 1 June she was put on the route HelsinkiStockholm. The new ships, the first ones to have a centerline promenade inside the ship, were highly popular but also proved to be somewhat expensive to operate. Unlike her sister, MS Silja Serenade, the Symphony's funnel was constructed of aluminium, which made the ship less heavy. Silja Symphony was also the third ship to arrive at the scene of the MS Estonia disaster on 28 September 1994.

On 7 February 1996, the ship was grounded in the Stockholm archipelago. In December of the same year her engines were upgraded with so-called water-spray technology that greatly reduced nitrogen oxide emissions. In order to keep tax free sales on the HelsinkiStockholm ships when the EU changed its tax free legislation, a stop at Mariehamn was added to the route in June 1999. On 6 August 2001, a swarm of fish got sucked into the ship's cooling water intakes, which resulted in the engines shutting down due to overheating. Due to the engine problem the ship arrived in Helsinki some 1½ hours late.

In January 2004 the ship made two special cruises to Tallinn, Estonia for the Finnish company SOK. Similar cruises were made again in January 2005. In January–February 2006, just prior to the sale of Silja Line to Tallink, the Symphony and her sister had their interiors extensively rebuilt at Luonnonmaan telakka, Naantali. During a storm on 9 January 2007 the Symphony accidentally rammed a boarding tube in the port of Mariehamn, resulting in approximately €600,000 worth of damage.

There are some small external differences by which the Symphony can be told apart from her sister: the outer decks on the Symphony are painted light blue (they are green on the Serenade), the eyes of the seal in Symphony's funnel are blue whereas they are white with a blue outline on the Serenade, and the light box with the ship's name on it is white on the Symphony, but blue on the Serenade.

Decks

  1. Engine room
  2. Engine room, Tourist II class cabins
  3. Car deck, crew accommodations
  4. Car deck, crew accommodations
  5. Spa, driver's club, Seaside and Tourist II-class cabins
  6. Conference rooms, Bistro Maxime, Café Orient, Buffet Symphony, Tax-free shops
  7. Atlantic Palace night club & casino, tax-free shops, Mundo; el Capitan; Happy Lobster and Bon Vivant restaurants, Tapas & Seafood bar, Old Port Pub, Siljaland children's playroom
  8. Atlantic Palace night club, Seaside and Promenade-class cabins
  9. Suites, Seaside, Promenade and Tourist I class cabins.
  10. Commodore lounge, Commodore, Seaside, Promenade and Tourist I class cabins.
  11. Silja suite, Commodore, Seaside, Promenade and Tourist I class cabins.
  12. Sundeck, Sunflower Oasis sauna, swimming pool and hot tubs, crew accommodations
  13. Bridge, bali disco, chill lounge, Silja Dream Theatre cinema
  14. Helicopter deck

Star used instead of Deck 13

See also

References

  1. ^ "Audited annual report of the 2008/2009 financial year" (pdf). Retrieved 2010-03-10.
  2. ^ Tallink corporate structure, retrieved 2008-09-08
Preceded by World's Largest Cruiseferry
1991–1993
Succeeded by