Rising Tide Bar - Oasis Of The Seas | Oasis Of The Seas Tide Bar

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Oasis of the Seas Rising Tide Bar

 Bringing new meaning to the phrase “raising the bar,” Royal Caribbean’s Oasis of the Seas is also home to the Rising Tide Bar, the first bar to move vertically between decks on a ship like a massive elevator with bartenders. According to a blog post by the chairman of RCCL, Richard D. Fain, early suggestions for moving passengers between decks included jet packs or a giant teeter-totter, but sitting down with a cold one while gently switching decks proved more popular, if only slightly less technically challenging, than the other options. Thirsty passengers who “miss” the bar and have to wait are treated to a fountain show, as water jets are revealed while the bar rises. When the bar descends, it sits like an island in a pool of water.
Oasis of the Seas Rising Tide Bar

International stage engineering company Serapid Inc. and WS Atkins, the UK architects who designed the Central Park and Royal Promenade decks, worked together on the design for raising and lowering the 40-ton bar. Lifting the bar on a standard hydraulic ram proved to be too problematic to implement. As the bar would be moving all day, the smell of hot hydraulic oil would escape into public areas, and there was also the possibility that it would pollute the water display under the lift. Iain Forbester, Serapid’s project manager on the Oasis, explains that another problem would have been placing a large hydraulic cylinder in the casino directly below the Rising Tide Bar, taking away space from patrons below.
Oasis of the Seas Rising Tide Bar

Working with WS Atkins’ Tom Wright, Forbester installed four Serapid LinkLift 100R columns, each capable of lifting ten tons the 35' distance between decks. The lifting columns, guide rails, and safety equipment are fitted into four 11m columns at the corners of the oval-shaped bar, so that they glide into protective tubes at the edge of the pool.
Forbester calls the LinkLift system “ideally suited” to this application, noting that the venue “presented us with some new challenges which are always interesting to an engineering-based company such as Serapid. We had always felt that the LinkLift product was suitable for architectural applications, and with this project, we were proved to be correct.”
A unique requirement was the need to accommodate the roll of the ship on the lift guides. “Normally with a lift, you would expect the maximum horizontal loads on the guides to be less than 10% of the weight of the bar, but here, with the ship’s motion, the loads on the guides can be 100% of the weight of the bar,” Forbester says. Serapid developed a steel support structure within the architectural columns to transfer the loads back to the ship’s structure.
Oasis of the Seas Rising Tide Bar

Aaron Sporer designed the lighting for the Rising Tide Bar, relying on 364 LED nodes of Philips Color Kinetics iColor Flex LMX, 20 Coemar Parlite LEDs, two Martin Professional Atomic 3000 strobes, and four Rosco PF-1000 fog machines. He also lit the water display with custom fixtures built and provided by OASE, including 14 RGB LED rainbow fountains, 19 RGB LED “stack” fountains, and four RGB LED fixtures. “The fact that the bar moves made the project a lot more interesting and dynamic,” Sporer says. “It makes the interaction between the lighting on the bar, lighting in the fountain, and the fountain itself much more interesting by hiding and revealing different elements over time.”
Oasis of the Seas Rising Tide Bar

The fountain and lighting are controlled by a Barco High End Systems Wholehog 3 and run through a series of timed displays of different looks. When the bar is raised up to the peaceful Central Park area, the lighting is relatively subdued. As the bar returns to the bustling Royal Promenade, the fountain shuts off, and the bar lighting integrates with the events on the Promenade.


Oasis of the Seas Rising Tide Bar

Royal Caribbean Cruise Promenade | Oasis Of The Seas Promenade

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Royal Caribbean Cruise Promenade

Royal Caribbean Cruise Promenade

Oasis of the Seas Promenade

Royal Caribbean Cruise Promenade

Royal Caribbean Cruise Promenade

Royal Caribbean Cruise Promenade

Royal Caribbean Cruise Promenade

Oasis Of The Seas Kids Pool - Oasis Of The Seas Childrens pool

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The outside area surrounding Ocean Adventure features a great children's pool that was not only safe for young children, they simply loved it.

The Ocean Adventure Kids Pool Slide
One of the most popular features of Ocean Adventure seemed to be the slide at the Ocean Adventure kid's pool. There were constantly kids going down the slide having a great time.

The Radiance of the Seas Main Pool Area

Oasis Of The Seas | Freedom Of The Seas | Roya Caribbean

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Oasis of the Seas and Freedom of the Seas - Cozumel (Mexico)

Good morning,

This is Oasis of the Seas, the largest cruise ship in the world and Royal Caribbean's newest ship.
I am on Deck 12 on board Freedom of the Seas which was the world's largest cruise ship until Oasis of the Seas was launched last December.  We are in Cozumel, Mexico, because of an itinerary change due to bad weather.
 Our ship's Captain Tor Olsen guided our ship smoothly along side the Oasis as people on both ships watched these gorgeous ships  move closer and closer together.
Captain Olsen was on the building team in Finland when Oasis was built so he knows her well.
Guests and crew members were excited about seeing Oasis
A hot tub at least 13 decks above the sea was a good spot for those on Oasis of the Seas to watch our arrival on Freedom of the Seas.
Oasis had backed into the dock, Freedom pulled straight in so we were along side, but faced in opposite directions.
The sheer size of these two ships is so incredible...
...that it is hard to comprehend that these structures were designed and made by human beings to travel on the high seas.
Shortly after lunch I went ashore to take some pictures of the ships side by side.  Oasis is on the left;  Freedom is on the right.
The two ships tied up to the same pier created a ship "canyon."
Later I took a walk on Freedom's deck 4 and captured this beautiful image of the water reflection on the bow of Oasis.
Here is another view of the ship "canyon," this time four decks above the sea...
...and another.
This is another view of that hot tub high atop Oasis that we saw as we entered the port.  Note the reflection of Freedom at the bottom of the image.
This image was taken just before 7:00 PM as Oasis was preparing for departure.
Her giant thrusters allowed her to slide gently away from the pier...
...and off to her next port.
As Oasis sailed away, the dock workers prepared to release the lines so we on Freedom could also move on to our next port.
A few days ago I received a couple of images from a friend.  The image above and the following one were taken from a helicopter the same day my pictures above were taken while both ships were along side each other in Cozumel.  The ship at the bottom of the image is Oasis of the Seas;  the ship at the top is Freedom of the Seas.  Amazing.
It was the bad weather that required Freedom of the Seas to change her itinerary so we had the opportunity to share Cozumel, Mexico with Oasis of the Seas this day.

Every cruise is a different, exciting adventure.

I hope you have enjoyed these images of this very special day.