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The maid has just tiptoed out, after opening the curtains. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the morning sun reflects off the glittering sea and, as you stir to wakefulness, you wonder just what it is you can see on the horizon. It can’t be St Petersburg – that was months ago – or New York, though you still haven’t unpacked all the shopping from that little interlude. Perhaps today’s the day you arrive in St Barts.
You’re all at sea – in your own penthouse with wraparound terraces, a twin-bathroom master suite, a fully wired home office and hotel-style concierge services at your beck and call. It has cost you an eight-figure sum for a 50-year lease. And now, my son, in the words of Minder’s immortal character Arthur Daley, the world truly is your lobster. Your new home is a private apartment on Four Seasons Ocean Residences, a 48,600-ton cruise ship that its developers hope will become the latest lifestyle choice for the seriously loaded.
Kristian Stensby, chief operating officer of Ocean Development Group, one of the partners behind the scheme, sums up his vision: “I just think it’s a unique way of life. You can circumnavigate the globe in the comfort of your home – and stay in touch with your investments.”
Secure a luxurious berth (anything from a one-bedder, with prices starting at £1.875m, right up to a fourbed triplex, from £20m) and you will be able to enjoy perpetual yet ever-changing sea views, turning up in all the right places at just the right season (Rio for carnival, perhaps, or the Caribbean for Christmas). Added to this is the appeal of an attentive level of service – and the knowledge that you’ve left the riffraff floundering in your wake.
All your seafaring companions will also own property on board: there’s no place for anyone who can’t afford the financial commitment. That is a lesson Stensby and his partners say they have learnt from the last high-profile attempt to get the rich to extend their understanding of the concepts of “offshore” and “flotation”.
For we have been here before. The 644ft, 43,500-ton World of ResidenSea, launched in 2002, was billed as the ultimate private property enclave for the seriously loaded: residences on board sold for between £1.45m and £5m, and the London-based property tycoon Peter Beckwith was among the multimillionaire buyers. Despite the hype, the project was not so much shipshape as pear-shaped. Its itinerary and business plan turned out to accommodate anyone who could afford a package holiday in one of the vessel’s regular cruise cabins, and soon the wealthy owner-residents were in mutinous mood.
Says Stensby, who made a close study of it while planning Four Seasons: “The demographics and expectations of owners and cruise passengers are totally different.” Which is a tactful way of interpreting reports that the ResidenSea holidaymakers were allegedly downing alcohol provided as part of their all-inclusive deals to the point of vomiting, falling down or fighting. Resident wives, meanwhile, did not take kindly to “gold-diggers” claimed to have been primping their assets in the La Prairie spa, then hanging around the bars in the hope of luring a wealthy husband (probably theirs).
“So,” Stensby says, “we decided our ship would be wholly residential: 112 private residences, no cruise cabins.” Early plans to sell some of the properties on a shared-ownership basis were scrapped. Other decisions, he adds, were “that it would be operated like a private club, with any revenue generated being paid back into a homeowners’ association; and that Four Seasons would be our partner”.
The upmarket hotel chain has been involved in the project from day one. It has directed the design of the living quarters and 70,000 sq ft of public space, and has a 50-year management contract to run the on-board services, which will include four restaurants, an 11,000 sq ft spa, a business centre with secretarial and video-conferencing facilities, 24-hour concierges and two designer shopping malls, dubbed Sloane Street and Bond Street. Construction will start this summer in Finland, and it should be ready to have a magnum of vintage bubbly smashed against its bow in 2010.
Marketing starts this month. So, who will want to buy in? Speaking to me from a smart dinner party in Mumbai, Charles Weston Baker, head of international residential sales at Savills, the selling agent, says: “Nobody here is interested in London property. They all want to know about the ship.”
Stensby points out that at this level, “most will regard it as their second or third home, or maybe fourth or fifth”. And Weston Baker makes it clear that even if you decide to make your maritime penthouse your primary home, you won’t get away with declaring yourself a citizen of the Four Seasons to divest yourself of tax liabilities in the non-floating world.
“It’s not a tax issue,” he says. “You use the Caymans for that. Funnily enough, quite a number on ResidenSea bought an apartment in the Caymans or the Bahamas to have a tax base there. It is not a floating tax shelter. But there’s no tax on board – except the service charge.”
Ah, the service charge. It is steep – at £52,500 a year for a one-bedder, rising to £512,000 to deliver hot and cold running flunkies to a four-bedroom triplex penthouse. But the target market should take that kind of sum in their stride.
As for whether you’d be able to get a mortgage on a property in a construction that has a declared shelf life of just 50 years . . . “Well,” says Danny Warman, vice-president of real-estate investment at the Florida-based Bayview Financial, one of the vessel's backers, “we anticipate that buyers will make their own private arrangements.”
But is it a good investment? If ResidenSea, now rebranded The World, is any guide, it’s far from spectacular. Even though the resident owners there clubbed together and shelled out a reported £40m in 2003 to buy out the financial backers and take over the running of the ship themselves, prices on the vessel have in no way mirrored the huge hikes in the world’s prime real-estate locations. The Cruise Line, a UK resale agent, and Hans Christian Magnus, an agent based in Norway, have studio flats (converted from the old cruise cabins) at a mere £400,000, two-bedroom flats from £1.2m and a four-bedder for £3.7m. It’s not an investment, Magnus says, but a second home, though he also points out that there’s a lively rental scene for flats on the ship, which was packed out for its recent sortie to Antarctica.
Four Seasons, on the other hand, declares that, on its vessel: “There is no rental programme in place for homeowners to rent out their residences” – though it doesn’t rule out the possibility that owners might get together and decide to institute one, or that an individual may choose to do so. For now, that means you’d really have to want to make a floating residential community your home (or one of them). But Olivier Beumer, an international sales executive at Savills, is refreshingly direct about the financial reality: “It’s a depreciating asset. It’s not an investment, it’s a lifestyle choice.”
Stensby reckons the life on board will appeal to “modern-day explorers”. They will differ from the traditional kind, presumably, in several ways: rather than agonising about whether to use huskies or ponies on an Antarctic adventure, they will wrestle with which interior design to choose for their cabin – contemporary, maritime or traditional? When they are bored with writing their travel journals, they can pop down a deck or two and buy a new Chanel handbag, or order staff to prepare a dinner party for 12 in their own kitchen – and have it served on their own roof terrace. If they suddenly find they have more pressing business elsewhere, they can summon a Sikorsky S-76 to whisk them away.
They certainly won’t be taking any unnecessary risks. The security arrangements are on what you might call the paranoid side of prudent: the 220 staff (and the prospective buyers, for that matter) will be thoroughly screened and on-board movement will be controlled with biometric scanners. There will be a resident security crew, though Stensby declines to “go into specifics” about whether or how they will be armed. If prospective buyers are still feeling a bit jittery, it might help to know that the ship will be “affiliated with an antiterror group with intimate knowledge of the vessel. Should something happen, they will dispatch within an hour”.
Happy cruising.
Four Seasons Ocean Residences sales: David Vaughan at Savills International, 020 7016 3814, www.savills.com/abroad
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