Carnival’s biggest ever cruise ship the AIDAnova launches – with 23 bars, a WATER PARK and a total cost of £630m
The brand new ship is 'green', holds 6,600 passengers and has 17 restaurants
The brand new ship is 'green', holds 6,600 passengers and has 17 restaurants
CARNIVAL Cruises has launched its biggest cruise ship to date, capable of holding 6,600 passengers.
The new AIDAnova ship is the fifth biggest in the world and is 1,106 feet long.
Inside there are 20 decks with 23 different bars and 17 restaurants, plus a casino, a water park, rock climbing walls, a gym and spa.
The ship, which has a tropical theme, cost £630million to build and weighs 184,000 tonnes.
Christened the AIDAnova, it will set sail for the first time in December, heading to the Canary Islands.
For those who want to go VIP, there’s a two-storey penthouse suite with floor-to-ceiling windows and robotic staff.
It's guilt-free cruising too, as the company has promised that it will commit to a “green cruising” concept.
AIDAnova has been designed to be more environmentally friendly and runs on liquefied natural gas instead of diesel.
It's recognisable from afar, thanks to the large smiley face painted onto it, which all AIDA ships have.
The ship's christening ceremony on Friday in Papenburgh, Germany attracted 25,000 people, and David Guetta DJ’d there.
AIDA president Felix Eichhorn said: “AIDAnova's naming ceremony was a special event in a special place
“We are delighted that we were able to stage the AIDA Open Air in Papenburg at the Meyer Werft shipyard, so that we could share our enthusiasm about our new ship with so many people.”
Carnival is building another two ships in this style by 2023.
The record for the biggest ship is Royal Caribbean’s Symphony of the Seas, which weighs in at 228,081 tonnes and can accommodate 8,000 people.
Like Royal Caribbean’s other Oasis class ships, the Symphony features seven distinct “neighbourhoods” to explore.
These include its famous surfing simulator Flowrider, a zip line, 9-hole mini-golf course, waterslides and the Abyss – a dizzying 10-deck high slide that whizzes you down the back of the ship.
Sun Online Travel took a trip on the Symphony of the Seas to see if the fuss about it is justified.