Tickets for the flagship's maiden passenger
voyage start at £2,145 |
The
world's biggest and most expensive cruise liner has successfully
completed sea trials and reached its top speed of 34mph.
Cunard's 150,000-tonne Queen Mary 2 is now waiting in the French
port of Saint-Nazaire, ready to sail to its home port of Southampton
for Christmas.
The Queen will name the vessel in a ceremony at the Hampshire
port on 8 January, four days before the ship leaves on its maiden
passenger voyage to Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
The ship undertook a measured mile speed test as part of the
trials - reaching 34 mph, or 30 knots - with 450 technicians and
engineers on board.
The Cunard flagship, which is as tall as a 23-storey building,
towers 60 metres (200 feet) above the waterline and produces enough
energy to provide electricity for a city of 300,000 people.
The ship has a 1,000-seat theatre, five
swimming pools and 14 bars |
Cunard
executive Peter Shanks said: "These trials have reaffirmed what we
have thought all along - that Queen Mary 2 will be the finest
transatlantic ocean liner ever.
"Her sea-keeping capabilities are second-to-none and we are
confident that the vessel will stun guests when they board for the
first time in January."
The QM2 cost £540m and has space for 2,620 passengers and 1,250
crew.
It is 345 metres long and 41 metres wide - dwarfing the Queen
Elizabeth 2, which weighs 70,000 tonnes, and the ill-fated Titanic,
which measured 269 metres in length.
Penthouse suites
The ship's facilities including a 1,000-seat theatre, a ballroom,
five swimming pools, a spa, six restaurants, 14 bars, a disco, a
library, a casino and even a planetarium.
The choice of accommodation for passengers includes duplex
apartments with private gymnasiums and penthouse suites with butler
service.
Lining the walls will be 300 works of art worth an estimated $3m.
Tickets for the maiden voyage to Fort Lauderdale, Florida have
prices to match - ranging from £2,145 for an interior cabin with no
view to £28,500 for a duplex.