PHOTOGRAPHS: IRIS BROSCH; GUILLAUME PLISSON
There’s a tried and rigorously tested formula for superyacht
design. But change is in the air, as Risa Merl discovers
down the middle, so the balconies
have a purpose. To me, if you’re
going to be bold, at least have
some meaning.” To Horsfield’s
point, whatever the design, it’s
important to take a step back and
study the motivations. If designers
are doing things merely for the
sake of it, or because they are
dictated by tradition, then a rethink
is surely necessary.
Past revolutions – not mere
trends but designs that literally
changed the shape of yachts – are
easy enough to pinpoint. Nearly a
century ago Charles E Nicholson,
known for epic classics from
Endeavour to Malahne, was the first
to put a full-beam superstructure
on a motor yacht. At the time, they
had appeared only on steamships.
Other revolutions are more recent.
Take the advent of the infinity
pool, first seen on Alfa Nero and
gamely followed by yachts such as
Axioma and Galactica Super Nova –
the latter adding a waterfall for
good measure.
Then there’s the ubiquitous
beach club. There was a time when
this space was not so important,
when yachts were more business
than party at the back. Then in the
early 1990s Lady Moura showed off
her cabana and, in 2010, Baton
Rouge took the beach game to
another level. It’s hard to imagine
that it was less than a decade ago
that the beach club started to take
up its rightful place in the yachting
lexicon. “Before you had the entire
stern of the boat, which is almost
half the boat – between the engine
room and garage – completely
REVOLUTION
?
rules out of the window. What
canny designers are doing,
therefore, is offering well thought
out alternatives that suggest new
and exciting ways of thinking.
Exterior
“It can’t all be about styling for
styling’s sake,” says Jonny
Horsfield, of H2 Yacht Design,
whose curvy exterior design for the
404ft Lürssen project Jupiter is one
of those rare instances when a
client gave him a blank piece of
paper to do something radical.
“Even though it looks a bit weird
and wacky, there is actually some
meaning to it. There is a big atrium
The truth is that the traditional
views of how yachts should be
arranged still hold strong and, of
course, there is some logic in much
of this thinking. But unfortunately
it can lead to near-identical layouts,
unused living spaces and decks
stacked like a wedding cake.
At the other extreme are those
eyebrow-raising concepts, swiftly
pounced upon by mainstream
media and dismissed by the
yachting set as unrealistic flights of
fancy. So rather than think about a
radical shake-up, perhaps we
should be thinking more in terms
of an intelligent and planned design
evolution. With the money at stake
it is hardly surprising owners don’t
want to throw all the traditional
Is superyacht design
stuck in a rut? It’s a
question that yacht
designers will often
ponder. While designers as a breed
would love to be agents of change,
driving bold and brilliant ideas
forward, they ultimately have to
answer to clients who might not
share their love of the avant-garde.
Above:
Guillaume Rolland
and Christian Liaigre
Right:
The waterfall and
pool on Galactica
Super Nova
Above:
The beach club
on Baton Rouge
“ Clients are getting younger and
younger and they want more of a
gathering place than a showpiece”
I
DO WE
NEED A
DESIGN
ILLUSTRATION Jamie Cullen
MAY 2017 WWW.BOATINTERNATIONAL.COM MAY 2017
Left: Charles E
Nicholson designed
Malahne (below)
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