A comparable sight in terms of size, and visible in recent years in Newport Harbor and elsewhere in Southern California, has been the Invictus which checks in at 216-feet long, Llewelyn said. more
See full version: 2 superyachts anchored off Newport Beach are drawing crowds
A comparable sight in terms of size, and visible in recent years in Newport Harbor and elsewhere in Southern California, has been the Invictus which checks in at 216-feet long, Llewelyn said. more
Blank said they also informed him that they would be transiting the harbor to pick up some guests from a public pier.
According to Superyachttimes.com, the larger “Lonian” superyacht is owned by Lorenzo Fertitta. He is chairman of Fertitta Capital, director of Red Rock Resorts Inc. and former CEO of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. The ship, built by Feadship, was purchased for $160 million in 2018.
Llewelyn said that both ships are not interfering with vessel passage and are fine to be located where they are. here
This impressive 95.2 meter motor yacht has an interior created by Reymond Langton Design and a regal exterior designed by Espen Oeino. Kismet features an aluminum superstructure, 13.8 meter beam, and six teak decks. This yacht reaches a top speed of 17 knots and hosts a crew of up to 28 members. The seven suites aboard Kismet accommodate 12 guests and are absolutely sumptuous. Moran Yachts currently manages the vessel and Kismet is available for charter in the Mediterranean and Caribbean. The weekly rate to enjoy this Lürssen yacht starts at over $1.3 million per week. more
Now known as Global, the yacht better known by the name Kismet was built by Lürssen Yachts in 2014. Its value is a staggering $200 million, and it was bought for the original price of $115 million by Pakistani billionaire Shahid Khan. more
One of Lürssen Yachts’ most notable luxury vessels is Pelorus, which is the 19th largest yacht in the world. It measures 115 meters long and was built in 2003. Its ownership has changed hands among the wealthy a few times, but was originally commissioned by a Saudi billionaire. After being bought and refitted by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich — who lost the boat in a divorce to his ex-wife — Pelorus was sold to David Geffen. It’s now owned by Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan. This vessel has a slew of luxurious amenities. Two helicopter pads, zero-speed stabilizers, several tenders, water toys, and jet skis are just the beginning. more
Pelorus has two 5,500 hp 12V 26 engines that allow it to reach a top speed of 19 knots. Its cruise speed ranges between 12 and 14 knots and this boat has an exterior with sleek lines and a grand style. A yacht this big can’t help but be imposing, only in the best of ways. Pelorus’ interior arrangement is kept hush-hush for the privacy of its owners, but it is known to have several luxe seating areas, hot tubs and pools, media rooms, libraries, a full gourmet kitchen, and a theater. It has enough room for a crew of up to 42 members and nine staterooms that accommodate up to 18 guests. The value of this yacht now tops $300 million. more
In this strange consensual dictatorship, where development deals happen behind closed doors, quite how the project came to pass remains a mystery. “We had never planned to build a tower,” says Daniele Marzocco, of the family company behind the €700m (£544m) project. “We proposed a villa for the site in 2003, then the ambition got bigger.” [links]
For those who already have it all, the Odeon Tower has a little bit more. When it is completed next year, the penthouse will have its own gym, sauna, cinema, library, whisky bar and billiard room, plus a master bedroom the size of two and a half tennis courts – all spread over five double-height floors. There will be tables upholstered with the skin of stingrays and shelves crafted from ebony. Rooftop hot tubs will bubble next to green walls trickling with waterfalls. After dinner in one of the six different salons (prepared by staff in one of the four kitchens), your guests will ascend a sweeping marble staircase to your very own nightclub, complete with a backlit marble dancefloor. From there, they will be able to launch themselves down a curving slide, plunging two storeys into the open-air infinity pool below.
The result, in the form of the Odeon Tower, is the kind of building Bond villains could only dream of. Clad in reflective blue glass, the stout girth of its two crescent-shaped wings rise up to sharply pointed blades, giving the top a serrated crown that lends it an air of menace. Verging on a parody of the Thunderbirds’ Tracy Island, the tip was originally intended to open up, like the petals of a crocus, to reveal a helipad. But Prince Albert decreed it too risky, all too aware of the negative publicity a chopper crash atop this temple to Mammon would bring. here
One of the largest developers in Monaco, Marzocco has turned its hand to everything from pink palazzos encrusted with wedding-cake mouldings to rusticated stone castles. The Odeon, its first venture into “contemporary”, is the work of architect Alexandre Giraldi, purveyor of a kind of flash mogul-moderne. The tower is curved, he says “to make it more sensual and shapey”. It is blue, he adds, “to connect with the sea and sky”. It is certainly hard to miss: a big vertical swoosh makes it look like it’s been squeezed into a swimsuit, while an LED-embedded facade will make it even more garish by night. It is not hard to see why angry neighbours have already nicknamed it the Odious Tower.
‘The definitive beacon of “super prime” property’ … an architect’s rendering of the Odeon Tower in Monaco more
The principality has long been a haven for those with assets to hide, but the Odeon Tower is an entirely new phenomenon, the result of increasing pressure on the 2 sq km microstate. For 30 years, there has been a tacit ban on building tall, following the steroidal boom of luxury apartment blocks in the 1970s and early 80s. The prohibition led to an ambitious plan to extend into the sea: a Dubai-style peninsula had been proposed, providing an extra 15 hectares to accommodate the growing flood of flight capital, but Prince Albert blocked the plan in 2008 when the financial crisis hit (though a downsized version of the plan has since returned). So the only other option was to go tall. here
bottled water, plates, napkins and silverware.
Since we will be on federal waters and marijuana is not federally legal, that's a big NO . You can leave the drugs at home. you're going to have a great time without them. [links]
This security deposit is necessary for damages or excessive messes that require additional or professional cleaning. For example: Upholstery tears, carpet stains, bodily fluid clean up. [links]