First look
with a hard chine and ending in an open cutaway stern.
But unlike her weight-saving, carbon fibre First siblings,
the Oceanis couples style with comfort, knowing that its
owners prefer to travel speedily, but with sundowner in
hand rather than hiking on the rail.
The greatest developments in the new Oceanis styling
have been centred around the cockpit, where the
philosophy has changed from a working functional
environment, to one more attuned to 90 percent of owners,
where one or two people do the work and everyone else
relaxes and enjoys. As such, the cockpit on the 55 takes
up roughly a third of the deckline. This is immediately
apparent from the moment you approach the stern and step
aboard via the electric-powered swim platform (a modern
equivalent of the hydraulic one on the Beneteau 62) and
have the vista of space stretching forward between the two
helms to full-length cushioned benches on either side of
the four-leaf cockpit table with in-built fridge, and then
ahead again to the twin cushioned sunbads built in either
side of the main companionway, and under the cockpit
arch with built-in mainsheet track. For longer cruises,
fitting the dodger makes these two sunpads ideal lee
berths for the off-watch in a sheltered area immediately
ready for action.
I used to write ‘dropping down’ the companionway, as it
was often the case, but in the 55, Beneteau has redrawn the
steps into more of a stairway than the ubiquitous ladder.
Plentiful deck
space is further
extended with
the floating beach
at the transom
Beneteau
Oceanis 55
34
New Boats