MS Mega Andrea

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(Redirected from Silja Festival)

Mega Andrea at Nice in 2022
History
Name
  • 1986–1992: Wellamo
  • 1992–2015: Silja Festival
  • 2015–present: Mega Andrea[1][4]
Owner
Operator
Port of registry
Route-
Ordered1983-04-13[3]
BuilderWärtsilä Helsinki Shipyard, Helsinki, Finland[3]
Yard number471[1]
Laid down1984-05-22[3]
Launched1985-03-15[1]
Christened1986-01-09 by Pirkko Työläjärvi[3]
Completed1986
Acquired1986-01-09[3]
Maiden voyage1986-01-09[3]
In service1986-01-09[3]
IdentificationIMO number8306498[1]
StatusIn service
General characteristics (as built)[3]
TypeCruiseferry
Tonnage
Length168.00 m (551 ft 2 in)
Beam27.60 m (90 ft 7 in)
Draught6.50 m (21 ft 4 in)
Depth14.45 m (47 ft 5 in)[5]
Ice class1 A Super
Installed power
Propulsion
  • 2 propellers
  • 2 bow thrusters
  • 1 stern thruster
Speed22 knots (41 km/h; 25 mph)
Capacity
  • 2,000 passengers
  • 1,625 berths
  • 1,200 lanemeters
  • 360 cars
General characteristics (after 1992 rebuilt)[3]
Tonnage
Capacity
  • 1,886 passengers
  • 1,937 berths
  • 300 cars[1]
NotesOtherwise the same as built MS Silja Europa

Mega Andrea is a cruiseferry owned and operated by Corsica Ferries Sardinia Ferries. She was formerly owned and operated by the Estonia-based Tallink as the MS Silja Festival, and used on their route connecting Riga, Latvia to Stockholm, Sweden. She was built in 1986 by Wärtsilä Helsinki Shipyard, Finland, for Effoa as MS Wellamo for use on Silja Line traffic. She was rebuilt in 1992 at Lloyds Werft, Bremerhaven, Germany as Silja Festival. In 2008 the ship was transferred from the Silja Line fleet to that of Tallink, but she retained her Silja-prefixed name.[1] After being replaced by MS Isabelle on the Stockholm-Riga route in May 2013 she was chartered as an accommodation ship to Kitimat, British Columbia. She was then sold in early 2015 to Corsica Ferries.

History[edit]

Wellamo[edit]

Silja Festival unloading in Turku, August 2001

Following the delivery of MS Finlandia and MS Silvia Regina for Silja Line's Helsinki–Stockholm service, Johnson Line and Effoa decided to order a pair of ships based on a similar design for the Turku–Stockholm service.[6] The first of the new ships, named MS Svea, was delivered to Johnson Line in May 1985.[7] The ship built for Effoa was given the name MS Wellamo (after the goddess of the sea in Finnish mythology, a traditional name in Effoa fleet) and delivered in January 1986. Following delivery she was placed on the StockholmMariehamnTurku route.[1][8]

The Wellamo suffered her first major mishap in July of the same year when she suffered a blackout and was grounded near Mariehamn. Following the grounding she was repaired at Luonnonmaan Telakka, Naantali, Finland.[1][8] In 1989 plans were made for converting the ship to a combined car/passenger/train ferry, but these were abandoned.[1] In the summer of 1990 the Wellamo briefly served on the Helsinki–Stockholm route,[1][8] because the new Silja Serenade was not yet complete, but old MS Finlandia had to be delivered to her new owners DFDS.[9] During the same year Effoa and Johnson Line merged to form EffJohn, who now became the sole owners of Silja Line.[9]

In the early 1990s EffJohn planned a large-scale reconstruction of GTS Finnjet. However the company could not gather enough funds to realise this project. Instead the money was used to rebuild the Svea and Wellamo.[10] In 1992, Wellamo was docked and rebuild at Lloyds Werft, Bremerhaven, Germany. Most notable exterior changes were a new skybar in front of the funnel and a new, more blue-dominated livery. Following the reconstruction the Wellamo was renamed MS Silja Festival (her sister having become MS Silja Karneval).[1][8] Around the same time her homeport was changed from Helsinki to Mariehamn.[1]

Silja Festival[edit]

MS Silja Festival arriving in Mariehamn, May 2005

Initially Silja Festival continued on the same route as before, alongside her sister, but following the acquisition of MS Silja Europa and the subsequent fleet re-organisation there was no longer a need for the ship on the Turku route. As a result, was placed on the VaasaUmeå route from 20 March to 23 May 1993. When Silja Line began collaboration with Euroway in June 1993, Silja Festival was moved to their MalmöTravemündeLübeck route, sailing parallel to MS Frans Suell. From there on the service was marketed as Silja Line Euroway. A few months later the route was extended to Copenhagen.[1][8]

After the Euroway service was terminated in April 1994, Silja Festival was moved back to the Kvarken to operate from Vaasa to Umeå and Sundsvall.[1][8] Around this time Silja Line made an agreement to sell Silja Festival or her sistership Silja Karneval to Norwegian ferry operator Color Line. Although Silja Karneval was the ship finally sold to Color, the new owners had presumed they would be getting Silja Festival and had made promotional posters for their new ship accordingly. As a result, the Silja Karneval was confusingly renamed MS Color Festival.

On 2 September 1994, Silja Festival was moved from Vaasa to serve the Helsinki–Tallinn route. For the summer of 1995, (26 June to 14 August) she served Vaasa–Sundsvall again, then returned to Helsinki–Tallinn. After the charter agreement of MS Silja Scandinavia ended in April 1997[11] On 5 April 1997, Silja Line switched the ship's flag from Finnish to Swedish and put her back on Stockholm–Mariehamn–Turku service, where she remained until 2008.[1][8]

Silja Festival was replaced on the Turku–Stockholm service by MS Galaxy on 23 July 2008. Subsequently, Silja Festival was moved to the Latvian ship registry, repainted with Tallink logos, and entered service on Tallink's Stockholm–Riga route on 2 August 2008.[1][12] Despite being moved under the Tallink brand and marketed as "Festival", the ship's registered name remained as Silja Festival.[1][13]

On 5 April 2013, Tallink announced the purchase of Viking Line's ferry MS Isabella which then replaced MS Silja Festival on the Stockholm-Riga route on 6 May 2013. MS Isabelle, which became the new name in the Tallink fleet, has more passenger and car capacity which is needed to meet the increased demand on the route.[14]

Silja Festival sailed to British Columbia, Canada in March 2014 to be used for accommodations for construction workers helping to construct Rio Tinto Alcan's new Aluminum Smelter. While in Kitimat, British Columbia the vessel was assigned the name "Delta Spirit Lodge".[15] Silja Festival remained moored at Rio Tinto's dock for just over a year prior to departing for Italy at the end of April 2015. Now she is called by her new name "Mega Andrea". And now she has enough work at Corsica Ferries in Italy. Her home port now is Genova.[16]

Decks[edit]

  1. Engine room, cinema
  2. Engine room, Tourist II-class cabins, sauna, swimming pool and hot tubs
  3. Car deck
    1. Car platform, can be lowered hydraulically to divide the car deck in two giving space for two layers of passenger cars
  4. Seaside, Tourist I and Tourist I S-class cabins, Lobby shop, Siljaland children's playroom, information desk, boarding, crew accommodations
  5. Silja, Seaside, Tourist I and Tourist I S-class cabins, crew accommodations
  6. Suites, Silja, Seaside, Tourist I and Tourist I S-class cabins, crew accommodations
  7. Dancing Palace night club (level 1), Captain's Grill restaurant, Trattoria restaurant, Café Martim, Sailor's Pub, Buffet Veranda
  8. Dancing Palace night club (level 2), casino, conference rooms, tax-free shop, perfumerie
  9. Panorama bar, crew accommodations, sundeck
  10. Crew accommodations
  11. Bridge[17]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Asklander, Micke. "M/S Wellamo (1986)". Fakta on Fartyg (in Swedish). Retrieved 3 August 2008.
  2. ^ "Audited annual report of the 2008/2009 financial year" (PDF). Archived from the original (pdf) on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Malmberg, Thure; Stampehl, Marko (2007). Siljan viisi vuosikymmentä (in Finnish and English). Espoo: Frenckellin Kirjapaino Oy. pp. 272–274. ISBN 978-951-98405-7-4.
  4. ^ "Mega Andrea (184979)". Miramar Ship Index. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  5. ^ "Silja Festival (13907)". DNV Vessel Register. DNV. Retrieved 3 August 2008.
  6. ^ (in Finnish)Valkeat Laivat: Valkeat kaunottaret saapuvat Archived 6 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 19 September 2007
  7. ^ (in Swedish) MS Svea (1985) at Fakta om Fartyg, retrieved 19 September 2007
  8. ^ a b c d e f g (in Finnish) MS Wellamo (II) at Valkeat Laivat, retrieved 19 September 2007
  9. ^ a b (in Finnish) Valkeat Laivat: Loistoristeilijöiden ja tappiovuosien aikakausi Archived 6 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 19 September 2007
  10. ^ FinnjetWeb: Finnjet Chronicle by Salomon Kaukiainen, retrieved 19 September 2007
  11. ^ (in Finnish) MS Frans Suell[permanent dead link] at Valkeat Laivat, retrieved 20 September 2007
  12. ^ Turun Sanomat 16 October 2007: Enn Pant uskoo Galaxyn nostavan matkustajien määrää Turun-reitillä[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ "M/S Festival" (in Latvian). Tallink Latvia. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2008.
  14. ^ newsclient.omxgroup.com
  15. ^ theglobeandmail.com
  16. ^ nwcoastenergynews.com
  17. ^ Silja Festival 2003 deck plans at Valkeat Laivat, retrieved 20 September 2007

External links[edit]