ShowBoats International — May 2017

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Where once onboard beach clubs
were converted from lazarettes or
garages with retractable swim platforms
that slid out over the ocean from
cassettes contained within the deck,
they are now increasingly integrated into
the yacht’s principal living spaces and
resemble something more akin to the
veranda of a beach house, complete
with bar and sunbeds, from which you
can dive – or lower yourself – directly
into the water.
“You want the beach club to be part
of the whole boat, to connect with the
rest of the deck and the interior,” says
Rowell. “It’s a proper architectural
challenge. We’re trying to get sand over
quite a large floor on one very large
project we’re working on,” he continues,
“although we may have to put it under
glass so it doesn’t get walked over the
rest of the boat. So it may end up being
a visual and textural thing rather than
something to put your feet in.”
Dedicated beach clubs are not,
however, the preserve of the bigger

which they have kept as close as
possible to the waterline and which is
large enough to accommodate a bar
area, dayhead, space for a massage
table and spa treatments and storage for
towels. Beyond the deck “a platform
pivots out from the bottom edge to
make a larger space just above the water
that you can sit on.”
The evolution of beach clubs is the
most overt example of a broader trend
towards blurring indoor and outdoor
spaces on board. “On Solis, we tried to
make the transition between the salon
and the aft deck invisible,” says Reeves.
“We decreased the height of the
balustrade and used glass bulwarks.”
Cut-outs in the backs of the couches
also draw the eye out to sea.
There’s a reason, then, that so many
of the designers that the venerable
manufacturer of marine-grade deck
furniture Summit collaborates with are
producing pieces that can be seen

INTERIORS REPORT

through. Take the couch, lounge chairs
and glass-topped coffee table that
Linley has created for Summit, Mark
Anders’ art deco-influenced sunbed,
and Brian Kane’s bar chairs.
The colors of the décor can reinforce
the sense of unity too, with earth tones
to echo the teak deck, and turquoises
and sea greens that speak of the
seascape. Certainly the latter were
evident in the range of woven outdoor
seating by Italian designer Paola Lenti
and showcased by Sabrina Monteleone,
founder and proprietor of Sabrina
Monte-Carlo (the Côte d’Azur’s go-to
emporium for deck furniture, furnishings
and table settings) when the pair
collaborated on the Upper Deck Lounge
at last year’s Monaco Yacht Show.
They were evident too on Galactica
Super Nova, the 230ft Heesen-built
yacht designed by Monteleone’s partner
Espen Øino, which also won two major
prizes at the 2017 ShowBoats Design
Awards, including the Judge’s Special
Award. Her stern and side terrace can
be transformed into a beach club,
partially sited below the 20ft glass-
bottomed infinity pool, which filters light
into the covered area with a lit-from-
within bar, equipped with a Kegerator,
so that crew can serve draft beer. At
night it becomes a party space, with
mood lighting and a DJ station.
Ultimately the scope for what is
possible in an onboard beach club is

limited only by the imagination. With just
two decks, the yacht concept Zen (a
262ft Feadship with Sinot interiors that
was unveiled in Monaco last autumn)
stands to break new ground in so far as
its barge-like shape maximizes the size
of the principal living space, which
sweeps down to a single aft deck/beach
club set just above the water.
Hareide Design Norway’s renderings
for a projected 354ft open plan vessel,
with a garden at its heart and a 66ft
swimming pool, are more extraordinary
yet. Its lower aft deck slopes into the
ocean so that the edge is lapped by
waves you can paddle in. In the words of
its designer, Einar Hareide, “We wanted

THE COOLER Owned by Hermès,
Puiforcat is a purveyor of exquisite
silverware. Its Jacaranda champagne
cooler, for example, is handmade in
silver plate and Brazilian rosewood
and comes with a lid, so it’s just the
place to keep sunscreen and drinks
cool. puiforcat.com

THE SEATING
Auckland-based
Coast maintains its
Marine Bean is the
original beanbag seat.
Handmade in marine-grade
canvas that is guaranteed
not to fade for at least five years,
the range includes three styles,
from giant cushions to more
structured chair shapes, as well as
an ottoman. They work well as
beach seating for when you want to
locate from the beach club to the
beach itself. coastnewzealand.com

Top: waves lap
on Hareide's deck.
Above: the broad
aft deck on Zen

THE DECK Among the striking features on Okto,
the ISA-built 217ft yacht launched in 2014, are the
distinctive black-and-gray decks made from Esthec,
a low-maintenance, non-slip composite resistant to
high heels and comfortable underfoot even in high
temperatures. It comes in a range of colors and can
incorporate motion sensors. esthec.com

superyachts. The designer Claydon
Reeves, whose yacht Solis won her
category at last year’s World Superyacht
Awards, has found a way to incorporate
“a pretty decent beach club” into
a 118ft yacht currently under
construction at Mulder Shipyard
in the Netherlands, without requiring
it to double as tender or toy storage.
“It’s not entirely simple that you take
your tenders out and you have a beach
club,” says founding partner Mike
Reeves. Even if the chocks recess back
into the deck and the crane can be
discreetly stowed, a garage is still an
essentially industrial space. “Invariably,”
he continues, “when you bring a boat
out of the water there will be a little
diesel slime on it that drips on to the
deck, which the crew will have to clear
up. And what do you do when the
tenders aren’t out?”
His solution has been to put the
tender garage athwartships and the
beach club behind it on the aft deck,

to create a platform for experiencing the
beauty of nature.” Isn’t a desire for
proximity to the ocean the principal
reason for wanting a yacht? In which
case scope to dangle one’s feet in the
water from the boat ought to be part of
the package.BB

6


KEY PIECES
FOR YOUR
BEACH CLUB

THE TALKING POINT Is it a seat? Is it a toy? Is it a work of art?
Produced by Magis in Italy, Thomas Heatherwick’s rotating Spun
chair is all three. As a student, the designer was taught the traditional
rotation practice by which silversmiths spin silver. He used it to produce
a chair in polythene, which is suitable for outdoor use. heatherwick.com

THE DAYBEDS Sabrina Monteleone’s furniture
company Sabrina Monte-Carlo supplies all
the non-fixed pieces you might need to
furnish an onboard beach club,
including adaptable Orlando
platforms from Paola Lenti’s
Aqua Collection.
sabrinamontecarlo.com

THE TOWELS Glancy Fawcett
supplies premium brands such
as Hermès, Missoni, Frette,
Yves Delorme, Olivier Desforges
et al, but it also offers a fully
bespoke design service to
ensure your towels match both
your boat’s décor and its livery.
glancyfawcett.com

The Summit lounge
chair and footrest
designed by Linley
THE EDGE IS LAPPED
BY WAVES YOU CAN
PADDLE IN

PHOTOGRAPHS: DAVID C CHURCHILL; GUILLAUME PLISSON

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