THE BEST OF - Roscioli Yachting Center
Transcription
THE BEST OF - Roscioli Yachting Center
GREAT SECOND ACTS: REFIT IN SOUTH FLORIDA THE BEST OF BRITAIN THE TIMELESS APPEAL OF THE BBC'S 'SHIPPING FORECAST' MASTER MODEL-MAKER MALCOLM DARCH FUEL FOR THOUGHT LNG POWER FOR YACHTS? ON THE COVER TANKOA’S SUPERB SUERTE Bringing the World to the American Yachtsman A cool fusion of a Westship 106 and a Donzi 80, Hello Dolly VII also borrows concepts the owner liked from the larger Westport 112s and 130s. Acquisition and Merger WHAT DO YOU GET WHEN YOU MARRY A CRUISING-YACHT HULL WITH A SPORTFISH SUPERSTRUCTURE? ONE FAMILY’S DREAM BOAT. By Andrew Parkinson “Let me get this straight,” I said, shifting in my seat while straining for clarity. “You put a what? On a what?” On the other side of the table, Tom Glass, vice president at Roscioli Yachting Center in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, paused— letting the questions sink in—before conceding, “Let’s just say it wasn’t your ordinary work order.” The term “refit” may refer to any number of yacht refurbishments, from interior redesign to new engines to system overhauls, but this particularly adventurous Roscioli client raised the bar. He decided to turn his 106-foot (32.3-meter) Westship raised pilothouse into a trideck superyacht. YACHTS INTERNATIONAL 52 It’s a vision that does not seem totally out of the realm of possibility. That is, until you consider his muse was a Donzi sportfish. “It all started when the father, Mr. Gray, Sr., came to us after being a Hatteras fan for many years,” Glass said, thinking about the various yachts the family has owned during the past quartercentury. “The men of the family are all about 6-foot-6, and when it was time to trade up, they requested [from Hatteras] certain customizations, starting with longer bunks.” Being a production yard at the time, Hatteras declined the change orders. Gray then approached Bob Roscioli of Roscioli Yachting Center, a yard known for semi-custom work. Roscioli agreed to the build order, and the Gray family ordered a semi-custom Donzi 65, which served them well—and still does today. When the time came again to upsize, Roscioli was at the top of the list. A number of factors contributed to the Gray family’s choice of a Westship 106. They looked at and appreciated several features on Westport 112s and 130s, but their slip on Florida’s Gulf Coast could handle no more than 110 feet of length overall. They also wanted to yachtsinternational.com PHOTOS COURTESY OF ROSCIOLI YACHTING CENTER ABOVE: The first plans for Hello Dolly VII comprised a crude cut-and-pasted idea on paper. BELOW (L-R): The crew quarters being configured in the footprint of the old pilothouse; Steps were added across the bow to new lounge areas forward of the flybridge and the new pilothouse. continue cruising and fishing their favorite grounds—the Bahamas and the Keys—which required a fairly shallow draft. Ultimately, the Grays determined that a Westship 106 with a 5-foot-10-inch draft would serve their purposes with a few adjustments. “We knew we would make some changes to Hello Dolly VII, but decided to hold off for about a year,” said Michael Gray, one of the sons. “After using the boat for a few months, we determined we needed a sky lounge, and with our sportfishing heritage, when you start talking sky lounge, then you start thinking, ‘Okay, let’s put something on top of that sky lounge: a flybridge.’” After what Glass calls some “imagineering” by Gray and his brothers, and a crude cut-and-paste drawing on a single piece of paper, it was game on. “I thought, Why can’t we just put a sportfish salon on top of the main deck?” Gray said. “So I measured the salon of a Donzi 73. It was about 6 inches too narrow, so I measured up the 80, which was within half an inch, so I asked Tom [Glass] to send me a concept.” There were no formal plans at the outset. “You’re building to a rule that doesn’t exist, so it was kind of shot from the hip,” Glass said. “We built a one-off mold of the 80 that would fit exactly. Then it was just making FEBRUARY 2016 53 LEFT: Roscioli spent countless hours making the necessary adjustments to fit the integration of the added sky lounge (right) and flybridge. ‘Yachting is so different from boating. It’s like having a whole business, whereas when you’re boating, it’s just you, the wind and the elements.’ —Michael Gray the necessary adjustments to meet the family’s needs, such as raising the freeboard and increasing the bulwark 19 inches, which allowed more privacy on the bow, where the hot tub was to be relocated. We added steps across the bow to new lounge areas forward of the flybridge and the new pilothouse, where a Portuguese bridge was also installed.” On paper, the finished interior layout benefited from spiral staircases, a roomy pilothouse with a reverse windshield, the sky lounge, an open-air flybridge with a hardtop, and true crew quarters. “The main difference we found between the 106 and the 112 was crew quarters, which we configured in the footprint of the old pilothouse,” Gray said. “We didn’t visualize in the beginning it would be all that important, but it turned out to be really important. It’s unusual to be able to house four crewmembers in a humane way on a 106.” According to Gray, the key was making it all pretty. “We didn’t think Bob (Roscioli) would sign on to doing this project if he had any doubt it would look beautiful in the end,” said Gray. Countless hours were spent reshaping and fairing the lines. Additionally, the 7.2 tons of weight added to the boat would most certainly affect performance, which Virginiabased naval architect Donald Blount addressed during sea trials. Part of the solution came in the form of a Seakeeper gyro, which effectively YACHTS INTERNATIONAL 54 aided in both the yacht’s performance and her stabilization. After 15 months and somewhere north of $2 million, the Gray family couldn’t be happier with their decision to refit. “Looking back, a Westport 112 at the time was about $6 million more than it cost us to do this deal,” Gray said. “And now we have an easily driven hull with good pedigree, great living spaces, a shallow draft: It’s everything we wanted.” Admittedly still getting used to having a crew, Gray has found the hardest part is learning to be what he calls a “yachter,” as opposed to a boater. “For me, yachting is so different from boating,” Gray said. “It’s socially more complex. It’s like having a whole business, whereas when you’re boating, it’s just you, the wind and the elements.” Staring out at the horizon from the flybridge of his shiny new creation, his voice trails off. After a moment’s pause, he glances back with a twinkle in his eye. “But what I thought was fun when I was 35, I’m changing my opinion at 55,” he adds. “Maybe I can learn to be a yachter.” For more information: 954 581 9200, roscioliyachting.com yachtsinternational.com