Escapade
Transcription
Escapade
ISSUE foUrtEEn thE SUpEryacht ownEr ISSUE foUrtEEn SEpt 2014 4254(s/0).)/.+./7,%$'%s)$%!3 3 5 0 % 2 9! # ( 4 / 7 . % 2 ) . 3 ) ' ( 4 %3#!0!$% The owner of Fitzroy’s final yacht on design and due diligence. 7(%.!5#4)/.37/2+ A closer look at the special realities of yachts under the hammer. &/2%6%2/.% Owner, broker and designer discuss the 54m’s kerb appeal. $%3)'.7!4#( We challenge four designers to create a yacht based on just an owner’s watch. 10 AN ACT OF ADVENTURE – WORDS BY ELLIE BRADE AND IMAGES BY CHRIS LEWIS AND ANDREA FRANCOLINI, COURTESY OF THE OWNERS Despite a challenging construction process that saw 37.5m S/Y Escapade’s build yard hit financial problems mid-project and eventually close, her owners achieved a yacht that is a triumph of style and design thanks to many years of experience in yachting, and a huge focus on detail. Ellie Brade met the owners in Auckland for a tour of the yacht. At the time of my visit to Escapade, the recently finished yacht is making its final preparations before departing on a twoyear global cruise. Having previously met the owner, let’s call him Mr E, at the 2013 Monaco Yacht Show, where he gave me teasers of what her interior would entail, I already know that this yacht is a labour of love for him and his wife, who both put an exceptional amount of thought and work into her design. As I am welcomed on board, our first point of discussion is the colour of Escapade (which, incidentally, exactly matches the owner’s wife’s Bentley). “It’s not gold!” stresses Mr E. “The official name is ‘sandstone’ in English and ‘champagne’ in French, but let’s stick with ‘champagne’ as that suits a superyacht.” With her distinctive carbon black mast and rigging, paired with the metallic champagne hull and red lettering, Escapade certainly stands out among her more demure sisters. Over the next two hours I am privy to a passionate and proud tour, with Mr and Mrs E explaining the thought processes behind each design decision and bringing the yacht to life for me. Every element of the yacht, from the colour scheme to how the smallest detailing fits into the overall look, was thought through. Undoubtedly the best Fitzroy yacht ever built, as swansongs go she is a triumph and credit to her owner’s vision and the skills of the build crew. “With Escapade the goal was to achieve a family yacht for my wife and son to enjoy a two-year cruise on,” says Mr E. Having chartered significantly and undertaken comprehensive research before deciding to build, they had a strong idea of what they knew would work. Designed by Dubois with an interior by Design Unlimited, the result is a personalised, stylish and yet practical yacht that is a great example of why gaining experience through charter and research is the best way to ensure a new build ends in a yacht that is right. Escapade’s interior was developed with a huge amount of input from the owner’s wife, who worked closely with the team at Design Unlimited. A selection of three woods – kwila/merbau, bleached oak and 12 13 “THE GOAL WAS TO ACHIEVE A FAMILY YACHT FOR MY WIFE AND SON TO ENJOY A TWO-YEAR CRUISE ON.” – MR E, OWNER OF S/Y ESCAPADE walnut – and warm nickel fittings form the base palette and throughout the yacht a standout feature is the art on board. An array of different paintings and pieces, gathered from around the globe, add personality to each space. In tribute to the couple’s home in Malaysia, Southeast Asian influences are an underlying, yet purposely subtle theme throughout. Malaysian songket, woods, artwork and more are all woven into the tapestry of the yacht’s design. As well as designing the yacht with a mind for beauty, their experience meant that practicality reigns throughout and all on-board spaces have been maximised. Simple solutions have been implemented to save space – lifting a silver plant holder out of its sunken seat in the bar top, Mr E explains that it doubles as a five-bottle champagne bucket, something they would never have had the storage for on its own. Every item on board is properly secured, labelled and has its own place, and although only 37.5m, the yacht manages to feel much bigger. The literal definition of the word 'escapade' is ‘an act of adventure’, and having been built for a two-year adventure, Escapade’s world tour will take her throughout Asia and the Pacific before she makes her way to the Caribbean and Med. The yacht is well equipped for the trip, with ample storage, on-board exercise machines and a full complement of fishing gear chosen by the owner’s son. As well as choosing New Zealand for its sailing yacht expertise, a key reason for the country’s selection was thanks to the yacht’s cruising itinerary. “We thought that if we built the yacht in Europe, we might never leave there except to go to the Caribbean,” says Mr E. The couple had narrowed their choice down to either the Netherlands or New Zealand and went for the latter in order to guarantee they would cruise the Pacific. “Building in New Zealand meant we knew we would do a proper round-theworld trip and it would force us to do this adventure properly.” It is no secret that Escapade's build Opening page: Escapade has been designed for a two-year world tour. This page: (top) Designed by Dubois, the yacht's interior scheme was developed by Design Unlimited with a lot of input from Mrs E, (bottom left) Jacuzzi on the forward deck, (bottom right) backlit bar in the main saloon, with double-purpose champagne bucket. Next page: Escapade underway. period was less than-straightforward. After Escapade’s build yard Fitzroy Yachts hit financial troubles midway through the build, the owners were forced to bankroll the yard to see their yacht finished, with the yard eventually closing on Escapade’s launch. As a result both the owners and the yacht were unfortunately and unduly subject to much public scrutiny during the latter stages of her build. One hundred employees out of work and the end of an era for the yard led to worker frustration, derogatory press and Escapade’s owner being associated alongside it all in the media. With so much coverage surrounding the yacht, and no word from the owners themselves to date, I am dying to ask Mr E for his side of this story. After broaching the subject, the response is a mix of emotion, frustration and resignation. “There are articles out there which are disparaging about me because 14 15 “BUILDING IN NEW ZEALAND MEANT WE KNEW WE WOULD DO A PROPER ROUNDTHE-WORLD TRIP AND IT WOULD FORCE US TO DO THIS ADVENTURE PROPERLY.” – MR E, OWNER OF S/Y ESCAPADE 16 “THE YARD HAD LONG BEEN IN TROUBLE AND MOST LIKELY SHOULD HAVE STOPPED TRADING DUE TO INSOLVENCY BEFORE OUR ORDER WAS PLACED, BUT WAS TRYING TO STAY OPEN BY FUNDING THE PREVIOUS PROJECT WITH THE NEXT.” – MR E, OWNER OF S/Y ESCAPADE I ended up being portrayed as the bad guy who closed the yard, when actually I paid all the arrears and made sure it shut down in a clean way rather than in messy bankruptcy,” he says. “I have been in business for 30 years with an impeccable record and now my name is associated negatively with something I never started, never wanted and that I only helped to close in an honourable manner. It’s been painful for me.” When I ask how things got to the stage where the yard was in such severe trouble Mr E cites incompetent and manipulative senior management, adding: “The yard had long been in trouble and most likely should have stopped trading due to insolvency before our order was placed, but was trying to stay open by funding the previous project with the next.” Going further, he says: “The lack of transparency, inaccurate costing and financial reporting and poor management impacted down several operational lines, resulting in bottlenecking, lack of forward planning, high reworking costs and more. The credit for this extraordinarily excellent end result can only go to the vast majority of the engineers and craftsmen who worked with dedication and a wealth of know-how and experience to compensate for poor management.” Thankfully the whole process has not put the family off ownership, and there is already talk of another, bigger yacht. “We might build again now we know what we want and what to do,” he says. Unsurprisingly, in any later build the choice of yard would be key. “Having been through this experience, my advice to other owners would be to always look closely at the true financials and management of any yard being considered, have a real due diligence done and insist on being provided with audited accounts,” says Mr E wryly. “If I build again I will make very sure I don’t end up with another failing yard!” A full report on the yacht’s design appears on TheSuperyachtOwner.com and in Q20 of SuperyachtDesign. FOR MORE INFORMATION ON DUBOIS VISIT: WWW.THESUPERYACHTOWNER.COM