MSC Seascape Celebrates Float Out in Italy

msc seascape
MSC Seascape celebrates flout out in Italy. (Photo courtesy of MSC Cruises.)

MSC Cruises celebrated the float out of its next flagship, MSC Seascape, at the Fincantieri shipyard in Monfalcone, Italy, a traditional event as the ship owner and shipbuilder of a new vessel come together to witness a ship touch water for the first time.

MSC Seascape will be delivered in November 2022, the second Seaside EVO class ship to enter the MSC Cruises’ fleet, and the fourth vessel in the line’s highly innovative Seaside class.

“The float out of MSC Seascape marks yet another significant milestone in the growth of our fleet and the vessel will pay homage to the oceans through yet another host of highly innovative maritime and design features, said Pierfrancesco Vago, executive chairman, MSC Cruises, in a press statement.

“We have continued with our ambitious new build plans, in spite of the pandemic, and today is a double celebration for MSC as our next flagship MSC Seascape is floated out into water simultaneously as her sister ship MSC Seashore is officially named at our very own private island, Ocean Cay MSC Marine Reserve,” added Vago.

“MSC Seascape—together with MSC Seashore—features some of the latest environmental technologies and solutions to minimize her impact on the environment, which will help us take a further step forward towards realizing our ambition of achieving net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050,” he added.

Giuseppe Bono, CEO of Fincantieri said in a press statement, “Such an imposing ship makes it even more suggestive to reflect on the enormous work behind her construction. We began the work on MSC Seascape almost concurrently with the onset of the emergency and today, together with an established operator like MSC, we celebrate her float out in line with pre-pandemic plans. The great determination in respecting production commitments and preserving the entire orderbook has become the hallmark of our group, an authentic cornerstone of the culture of the company, and there could not be a better precondition for looking to the future with renewed confidence.”

MSC Seascape will be able to accommodate up to 5,877 guests with approximately 140,000 sq. ft. of outdoor space.

In addition, MSC Seascape’s sister ship, MSC Seashore, is officially named today at Ocean Cay MSC Marine Reserve in The Bahamas, the first naming ceremony for a cruise ship to be held at a private island anywhere in the world. The ship’s naming ceremony also marks the formal inauguration of Ocean Cay MSC Marine Reserve, which opened in late 2019 and closed temporarily due to the global COVID-19 pandemic.

For more information, visit msccruisesusa.com.

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