6. Evolution of Long Wharf Cruise Terminal
2008: $1 million Improvements Completed “to-date”
7. What the future may look like..
350000
300000
250000
200000
150000
100000
50000
0
8. What the Future May Look Like..
Cruise Ships have steadily
increased in length over the
past 20 years…
and the trend continues.
Opportunity…. But with a challenge.
9. What the Future May Look Like..
With our present cruise berth capacity, on
any given day:
Due to ever increasing vessel sizes, we are
rapidly becoming a “two-ship cruise port”.
We can only accommodate one vessel in
excess of 300m overall length.
12. RCCL - Oasis Class
Introduced in 2009
360 Meters Long
220,000 GRT
5400 Passengers
13. Current Pugsley & Lower Cove Berth Capacity
Pugsley A/B – 388 m
Pugsley C – 235 m
Effectively Obsolete
Lower Cove – 224 m
14. Proposed Pugsley Berth Extension
New Berth Length – 645 m New Wharf Area
320 – 340 metres
15. Proposed Long Wharf Extension
Approx. 320 metres
New Berth Length – 645 m New Wharf Area
16. The Early 90’s
Vessels were
often docked at
cargo facilities.
17. Don’t want a comment like this:
“We did a shore excursion and walked
around Saint John - all very pleasant but
unfortunately we docked at a cargo
facility and were quite far from the city
center. This wasn’t particularly inviting or
convenient compared to the other ships
that were at modern cruise piers. Not
sure why we weren’t.”
19. Panelists
Les Parsons – Executive Director Historic
Charlottetown Seaport
John Heylen – Senior Manager Fleet Operations
Carnival UK
Crystal Morgan – Director Market Planning, Princess
Cruises