The 18 winners of the ShowBoats Design Awards 2017

Best Interior Layout & Design - Motor Yacht above 500GT

Cloudbreak

Length: 72.3m

Interior design: Christian Liaigre

Builder: Abeking & Rasmussen

The freshness of the layout and décor of this purpose-built yacht created for a young owner obsessed with outdoor sports quickly captured the attention of the judges. They appreciated the open spaces and huge windows for taking in the surroundings, as well as the uniqueness of a fireplace lounge, in which to warm up after skiing or diving adventures, and the winter garden, both indicating the yacht’s extreme latitudes cruising agenda. Christian Liaigre used angled walls, unusual strip lighting and a dramatic stair column to present surprises at every turn. The judges were also impressed by smart features such as a corridor that allows guests direct access from their cabins to the gym and an excellent crew arrangement with a separate crew mess and lounge and thoughtfully placed cabins for pilots and sports instructors.

Best Interior Layout & Design - Motor Yacht below 500GT

Sexy Fish

Length: 39.3m

Interior design: Tansu

Builder: Tansu

Beach house ease, pure and simple, won the day. The yacht’s layout and décor is a follow on from the original Tansu yachts in the Mothership series, the 35.2m Ceylan and the 36.4m Preference. Designer Riza Tansu took this yacht a step further by adding a central interior stair column from the wheelhouse to the main deck to facilitate service to the upper bar area, which can be either an open or protected space with sliding roof and louvred side panels. Beds and cabinets that appear to float off the wide-planked, natural floor timber appealed to the judges as did the round portholes in the cabins. The shapes of the rooms and the built-in furnishings created a harmonious match to the exterior design and profile.

Best Naval Architecture - Semi-Displacement or Planing Motor Yacht

Gipsy

Length: 35.3m

Naval architect: Umberto Tagliavini

Builder: Otam

While there were no radical designs among this group’s 2016 launches, three finalists stood out among the contestants. In the objective analysis, Gipsy moved to the front for her efficiency. This 35 metre tri-deck design is a well-considered upsizing of a 28 metre sister drawn by Umberto Tagliavini for Otam several years ago and developed through a tow-tank review. For Gipsy, the builder specified a hull shape capable of a comfortable ride in sea conditions likely to be encountered by a yacht with 2,000 nautical mile range.The brief also specified a 20-knot top speed for the relatively large volume yacht. The naval architect responded with a deep-V bow that transitions to an asymmetrical aft section with 14-degree deadrise, short, sharp chines and propeller semi-tunnels. CFD analysis further refined the bow and stabiliser fins’ position to best advantage. The yacht achieves her 14.1-knot fast cruising speed at just 51 per cent power.

Best Naval Architecture - Sailing Yacht

AQuiJo

Length: 86m

Naval architect: Tripp Design Naval Architecture

Builder: Vitters Shipyard & Oceanco

This yacht moves into new territory. A ship by virtue of her equipment and gross tonnage and certainly comparable to a large motor yacht in size, displacement and appointments, this is nevertheless a true sailing yacht for safely circumnavigating the globe. In fact, she will have to, as her masts are too tall for passage through Panama. Two hulls were developed through CFD and 1:15 models tested in towing tanks produced the final shape. Wind tunnel simulations refined the superstructure and sailplan. Twin rudders to boost feedback and control and a lifting keel minimise her harbour draft to 5.23 metres. At full draft of 11.66 metres, the ballasted foil provides ample stability. With a sail area to displacement ratio typical of smaller racer/cruisers, she performs remarkably in light air – 10.5 knots close hauled in 8 knots of breeze – while she can exceed 20 knots reaching with reefed sails in a 30-knot blow. As the leader of the naval architecture panel aptly put it: “She’s an amazing piece of work”.

Most Innovative Motor Yacht

Wider 150

Length: 47.1m

Naval architect: Fulvio de Simoni / Wider Engineering & Sydac

Interior design: Ideaeitalia

Exterior styling: Fulvio de Simoni

Builder: Wider

Following the transformer nature of the Wider sport boat, it was clear that the builder’s first true superyacht would also be a “shapeshifter”. The corollary to the adage “form follows function” is that when function changes, so must the form, and that is what Wider CEO Tilli Antonelli has arranged throughout the yacht, allowing it to live bigger than its actual LOA. The float-in tender garage/swimming pool/beach club maximises options without compromising on living spaces or tender size. But the true innovation of the Wider 150 is the propulsion system that fully leverages the hybrid concept, eliminating the traditional engine room and locating the electrical generators far away from owner and guest areas, thus opening up a new world of barrier-free interior layout possibilities. Insulated electrical cables powering Veth azimuthing pods replace the traditional shafts and propellers and an Emerson Industrial Automation system utilises batteries and one to four gensets to deliver just the right amount of power for hotel use or navigation.

Most Innovative Sailing Yacht

My Song

Length: 39.6m

Naval architect: Reichel-Pugh Yacht Design

Interior design: Nauta Design

Exterior styling: Nauta Design

Builder: Baltic Yachts

This was a strong category and the top three finishers were separated by just four points. With My Song, Nauta, Reichel-Pugh and Baltic triumph with things you don’t see: a sophisticated, fully retractable, azimuthing propeller, hydraulic and line runs hidden in the bulwarks to reduce deck thickness, a “crush nose” on the keel bulb to reduce impact and damage of a grounding, and a construction weight-shaving program by the yard that rendered even small parts such as electrical cable trays in carbon fibre. Even the interior has some weight-saving tricks with resin-coated linen used for floors, countertops and bulkheads. In three hours the rig can be switched from a typical cruising mainsail to a flat-topped main and split running backstays for racing. For stowing the 400kg Code Zero racing headsail, a very large drum hidden in the forepeak coils the 55m sail. For cruising, the wide stern creates a sheltered sunbathing area that features hydraulic seating integrated into the flush decks.

Best Lighting Design

Sybaris

Length: 70m

Interior design: PH Design

Exterior styling: Perini Navi

Lighting Specialist: PH Design in collaboration with Lindsey Adelman

Builder: Perini Navi

Reflecting on the fact that lighting can make or break a yacht interior and take its exterior from merely functional to exciting, the ShowBoats Design Awards added this category to the line-up for 2017. The inaugural winner of this award, PH Design, collaborating with Lindsey Adelman, noted that the lighting plan began with the first pencil strokes for the interior, which was planned from the beginning to showcase art amongst subtle finishes. It is the design firm’s first yacht. The judges were impressed with the sophistication of the plan, which in some cases uses asymmetry to give the illusion of extended spaces and floating walls. The use of both uplighting and downlighting for ambient light draws the eye to special pieces and helps direct movement through the yacht and set various moods. Adelman’s seemingly delicate fixtures were modified especially for this project and installed by the renowned artist herself.

Young Designer of the Year

**The two winners of the Young Designer of the Year 2017 are Student Designer, ****Thibaud Le Merdy, and Professional Designer, **Eric Laurent.

You may read more about them here.

Newcomer of the Year

PH Design

Yacht: Sybaris

Length: 70m

Three design firms were put forward as finalists for this award, which recognises individuals and companies undertaking their first large yacht project. The judges welcomed and carefully scrutinised their fresh approaches to design and reviewed how their participation factored into the overall project. Sybaris is the first yacht commission for PHDesign, the Miami-based design firm headed by Peter Hawrylewicz, although he has completed residential projects for the yacht’s owner. As well as interior and furniture design, the firm is grounded in architecture, a trifecta of sorts for this project, which presented the team with the envelope of a very powerful sailing machine designed to circumnavigate. The judges applauded the boldness of materials and unique details in the design. “Each environment we create is specific to time and place, but global and hopefully timeless in its appeal,” says Hawrylewicz.

Lifetime Achievement

Germán Frers

Naval Architect

Buenos Aires, Argentina

First yacht design: Mirage, 1958

Some people are said to be born with a silver spoon; for Germán Frers it was more like a silver pencil. There was little doubt that Germán would learn naval architecture as his father, also Germán, was a leading figure in sailboat design. He grew up racing dinghies and later crewed on powerful yachts his father designed for offshore races such as Buenos Aires to Rio, the Bermuda Race and Onion Patch, Admiral’s Cup and SORC. Helping in his father’s studio as a draftsman after school, in 1957, the first boat launched to his design. It was a 10 metre offshore yawl and the first fibreglass boat ever built in Argentina. He was just 16. While Germán was still at college, Rod Stephens heard about his talents and invited him to work at the legendary Sparkman & Stephens design firm, where he became one of the principal architects, before establishing an independent studio.

In 1970, however, he returned to Argentina to take up the reins of his father’s studio. His first two yachts for the Argentine Admiral’s Cup team did well and his next big project, the 55 foot Scaramouche, won nearly every race it entered. His designs have won all the major trophies around the world and his client list is a Who’s Who in both racing and luxury cruising circles. Straddling both those worlds, he began designing for Nautor’s Swan in 1979, a relationship that continues to today. In 1989 he moved to Italy to design Raul Gardini’s America’s Cup challenger, and in so doing created Il Moro di Venezia, the fastest challenger of the new America’s Cup class of yachts that replaced the 12 metres in 1992. The Frers team next joined Prada for the 2000 Cup and the Frers-inspired Luna Rossa also won the Louis Vuitton challenger series.

He maintains a design office in Milan, run by his son, naval architect, Germán “Mani” Frers. Together, three men named Germán Frers have designed more than 700 boats. In recent years, Germán’s star shines in the stratosphere of superyachts, from Rebecca and Hyperion in 1999 to Indio in 2009 to 2013’s multi-award-winning Inukshuk, and 2016’s Unfurled, Sailing Yacht of the Year in 2016. We congratulate Germán Frers for his lifetime of yacht design excellence.

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