Star Princess in Stockholm, Sweden in May 2010 |
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Career | |
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Name: | Star Princess |
Owner: | Carnival plc |
Operator: | Princess Cruise Line |
Port of registry: | Bermuda, Hamilton |
Builder: | Fincantieri, Italy |
Yard number: | Monfalcone, 6051 |
Launched: | 10 May 2001 |
Completed: | 25 January 2002 |
Identification: | Call sign: ZCDD6 IMO number: 9192363 MMSI no.: 310361000 |
Status: | Operational |
Notes: | [1] |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Grand class |
Type: | cruise ship |
Tonnage: | 109,000 GT 73,347 NT 10,852 DWT |
Length: | 289.62 m (950.2 ft) |
Beam: | 36 m (118 ft) |
Draught: | 8.45 |
Decks: | 52 |
Deck clearance: | 8.45 m (27.7 ft) |
Speed: | 22.5 knots service speed 24 knots max |
Capacity: | 2,590 passengers |
Crew: | 1,150 |
Notes: | [1] |
Star Princess is a Grand-class cruise ship, operated by Princess Cruises. Star Princess is a sister ship to Grand Princess and the Golden Princess.
An earlier ship of the same name is now operating as Pacific Pearl. Star Princess was built by Fincantieri in Monfalcone, Italy in 2002, and has hull number 6051. Star Princess differs slightly in upper deck layout from her predecessors, having an extra plunge pool (and one less hot tub) at the stern (deck 15) and with the deletion of the "Off Limits" teenagers' hot tub & sunbathing area featured further forward on her predecessors.
Another ship of similar design, Caribbean Princess, was subsequently built, featuring an additional deck of cabins ("Riviera Deck") to accommodate more passengers.
Contents |
On 23 March 2006, at about 3 am, a fire broke out in the passenger compartments, amidships, on the port side of the ship.[2] Shortly after, the captain sounded the general emergency signal—seven short blasts followed by one long blast on the ship's whistle, which woke passengers up all over the ship. Passengers went to muster stations and evacuees were combined into groups, then stationed in cramped rooms for about seven hours. Some passengers who needed regular medication required crew members to go into their suites and retrieve their medication.
Passengers evacuated their cabins into public areas through smoky hallways, grabbing their life jackets on the way. The evacuation was reportedly orderly, in contrast to deadlier fires such as those on Morro Castle and Yarmouth Castle.[3] Lifeboats were lowered, but proved to be unnecessary, as the fire was contained and doused, and the ship headed into Montego Bay under her own power.
The fire was probably caused by a cigarette left burning on a balcony, which had become hot enough to melt the balcony divides made from plastic polycarbonate, a material that had been approved by international cruise line safety rules. The fire caused scorching damage in up to 150 cabins, and smoke damage in at least 100 more on passenger decks 9 to 12 (Dolphin, Caribe, Baja and Aloha decks). A passenger, Richard Liffidge, 72, of Georgia, died from "asphyxia secondary to inhalation of smoke and irrespirable gases" and thirteen other passengers suffered significant smoke inhalation.
While a smouldering discarded cigarette probably did cause the flames, the following items were also at fault for allowing the fire to spread as quickly as it did:
Passengers were evacuated to hotels in Jamaica and subsequently were flown home. The ship was en route from Grand Cayman to Montego Bay, Jamaica, after departing Fort Lauderdale, Florida on 19 March 2006. With 79 cabins destroyed and a further 204 damaged, the ship was moved to the Bahamas where she was prepared for a transatlantic crossing to Bremerhaven, Germany for repairs. Her remaining Caribbean cruises and a transatlantic cruise were cancelled, with the anticipation that she would begin her summer season in the Baltic mid-May.
The ship was repaired at the Lloyd Werft in Bremerhaven, set sail again on the 13 May 2006 and resumed its regular service on the 15 May from Copenhagen.[4][5] Passengers reported that the only noticeable differences were a strong smell of new carpeting, the addition of sprinklers to all balconies and the replacement of plastic furniture with non-combustible alternatives.
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