MS Oosterdam explained

MS Oosterdam is a cruise ship of the Holland America Line, a division of Carnival Corporation & plc. Launched in 2002 as the line's second Vista, Oosterdam is sister to,, and . The ship's name is derived from the Dutch translation for the eastern compass point.

Christening

Oosterdam was christened by Princess Margriet of the Netherlands in Rotterdam on 29 July 2003, Holland America Line's founding city. The event was held over three days of celebrations marking the company's 130th anniversary. The joint flagship of the fleet,, joined Oosterdam "bow-to-bow" in welcoming her.

Technical information

The machinery spaces aboard Oosterdam are vast and extend along two of its lowest decks for the most part of the vessel.

MS Oosterdam is powered by a CODAG propulsion system encompassing five Sulzer ZAV40S diesel engines (three 16-cylinder and two 12-cylinder, built under license by Grandi Motori Trieste, now owned by Wärtsilä, in Trieste, Italy)[1] [2] and a GE LM2500 gas turbine.[3] She is one of only a handful of merchant vessels that is powered by such an arrangement. It is propelled by two 17.62 MW (23956.53 ps), 160rpm synchronous freshwater-cooled ABB Azipod propulsors.

Its two engine rooms are separated by a watertight bulkhead. Each engine room is fully independent of the other, with its own fuel, lubricating, cooling and electrical distribution systems.

The ship's potable water is produced by three large Alfa Laval multi-effect flash evaporating desalination plants.

History of the name Oosterdam

While no prior ship has been named Oosterdam, the first vessel with the "Ooster" prefix launched 1913 as the 8,251-ton, one-prop freighter Oosterdijk. At the time, "dijk" or "dyk" was the suffix used for cargo vessels, "dam" was used for passenger ships. She sailed between Rotterdam and Savannah, Georgia for Holland America as well as serving the Allied war effort during World War I.[4]

Areas of operation

The ship has been alternating fall/winter cruises along the Mexican Riviera and summer in Alaska. In the autumn of 2011, she visited Hawaii for the first time.[5] After January 2012, Holland America paused visits to Mexico's west coast, in part due to safety concerns there in connection to the Mexican Drug War and in part due to the depressed cruise market in Southern California; the Oosterdam shifted to Hawaii, Australia, and the South Pacific.[6] Holland America was the first cruise line to resume service to Mazatlán in the autumn of 2013 with MS Veendam, and Oosterdam followed suit shortly thereafter.[7] On 4 May 2019 Oosterdam collided with while docking stern to stern in Vancouver, British Columbia. There were no injuries reported and disembarkation on both ships proceeded as usual.[8] As of mid-2024 she is sailing in the Mediterranean.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wärtsilä In Italy . 18 March 2010 . 18 March 2010.
  2. Web site: Propulsion Engines for Cruise Ships . https://web.archive.org/web/20110721082331/http://www.lme.ntua.gr/repos/lessons/resiliently.pdf . dead . 21 July 2011 . 18 March 2010 . May 1991 .
  3. Web site: GE LM2500 Press Release . General Electric - Aviation . 17 March 2010 . 16 March 2004.
  4. Web site: News Release - December 6, 2002. Holland America Line . 6 December 2002.
  5. Web site: Cruises on ms Oosterdam, a Holland America Line cruise ship . Holland America Line . 2010 . 3 July 2010.
  6. Web site: California Dream? So-Cal Cruise Travel Dealt Another Blow . 12 May 2011 . 21 January 2012.
  7. Web site: Mexico: Three cruise lines returning to Mazatlan. 2013-09-10. Los Angeles Times. en-US. 2020-01-03.
  8. Web site: Two cruise ships collide in Vancouver port . 5 May 2019 . 22 May 2019.
  9. https://www.vesselfinder.com/vessels/details/9221281 MV Oosterdam at vesselfinder.com