Norwegian Joy Sails from New York City - August 11, 2024 #ncl #norwegianjoy
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Norwegian Joy is a Breakaway Plus-class cruise ship operated by Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) and is the second of four Breakaway Plus-class vessels in the company's fleet. Built by Meyer Werft in Papenburg, Germany, she was delivered in April 2017. On 17 October 2012, NCL announced it was ordering its first Breakaway Plus-class ship from Meyer Werft, with an option for a second ship slated for delivery in spring 2017. Breakaway Plus-class ships would be designed larger than the fleet's Breakaway-class ships, with an increase of 17,000 GT to 163,000 GT, making room for a higher guest capacity and more features. On 16 July 2013, NCL announced that it was confirming the order for the second ship, reportedly at an estimated cost of approximately €700 million. Together with the first Breakaway Plus-class ship ordered nine months prior, the two-ship order would amount to a total cost of approximately €1.4 billion. On 8 October 2013, NCL announced the name of its second Breakaway Plus-class ship as Norwegian Bliss, which was chosen from an online contest it held for fans in September to name its two new ships on order. But on 12 October 2015, NCL announced the ship would be deployed to China and would no longer be named Norwegian Bliss, with a separate announcement on 29 February 2016 announcing she would be named Norwegian Joy and have a conjoining Chinese name, 诺唯真喜悦号 (Nuò Wéi Zhēn Xǐ Yuè Hào). The ship began construction with the steel-cutting at the Meyer Werft shipyard on 16 September 2015. Her keel-laying and coin ceremonies were performed on 5 April 2016, in which a ceremonial coin was placed under the first of 80 total blocks to be laid. The first 120 metres (390 ft) section was later launched on 4 June 2016. During her construction, two separate fires broke out. The first occurred on 28 September 2016 and was later attributed to welding work, costing the shipyard approximately €50,000. The second occurred on 8 October 2016, damaging several cabins after it broke out on a balcony, and was also later attributed to welding work. Four weeks after the second fire, on 3 November 2016, Meyer Werft announced that construction was no longer behind schedule from the fires. On 4 March 2017, Norwegian Joy was floated out from the shipyard. She began her 14-hour conveyance along the Ems from Papenburg to Eemshaven on 26 March 2017 and performed her sea trials in the North Sea through the rest of the month. On 21 November 2016, Norwegian announced that Norwegian Joy would be christened by a godfather, Chinese singer, Wang Leehom. On 27 April 2017, Meyer Werft delivered Norwegian Joy in Bremerhaven. On 27 June 2017, Wang christened the vessel in Shanghai. On 30 March 2016, following news that the ship would debut in China, Norwegian announced that Norwegian Joy would be homeported in Shanghai and Tianjin once she arrived in China. Following her delivery in April 2017, she left for Shanghai from Bremerhaven, making maiden calls in Singapore, Qingdao, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong for inaugural one-day events, before arriving in Shanghai on 10 June 2017 to sail exclusive cruises prior to her christening. She began her inaugural season of voyages from Shanghai on 28 June 2017, with sailings from Tianjin between 26 August and 15 September. During her time homeported in China, Norwegian Joy primarily sailed four-to-five-day voyages from Shanghai to various ports in Japan, and moved to Tianjin for a brief period in the summer, performing the same length of voyages that also visited various ports in Japan. On 19 July 2018, Norwegian announced Norwegian Joy would be redeployed from China to the United States to begin sailing to Alaska from Seattle in 2019 and replace Norwegian Pearl, joining sister ship, Norwegian Bliss. Before moving to Seattle, Norwegian Joy underwent a $50 million refurbishment to redesign her public spaces with features more popular for a Western audience and make her more similar to Norwegian Bliss. Work began on the ship's transformation on 11 March 2019 as the ship sailed from China to Singapore for a 21-day dry dock, continued through the transpacific crossing, and ended in late-April 2019 after a final five-day wet dock upon arriving in Seattle. She sailed two preview voyages between 26 April and 30 April before debuting on her first Alaskan sailing from Seattle on 4 May. Following her first Alaskan season, Norwegian Joy sailed Mexican Riviera cruises from Los Angeles and Panama Canal transits between Los Angeles and Miami. In the summer of 2020, she was scheduled to return to Seattle to operate Alaska cruises, though the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of the season. In fall 2020, she is scheduled to cruise five-to-seven-day voyages from Miami to the Caribbean, before debuting in New York City in April 2021 to sail to Bermuda and the Maritimes.