The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition -- June 22, 1998 Slow Boat: Disney's Perfectionism Frustrates Cruise-Ship Contractors
BY DANIEL MACHALABA and BRUCE ORWALL Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
MARGHERA, Italy -- Gianni Alassio used to enjoy reading Mickey Mouse comics. That was before his employer, Demont Srl, started work on Walt Disney Co.'s first-ever cruise ship, the Disney Magic. Now, Mr. Alassio hopes never to lay eyes on Mickey again. "It makes me remember this job," he says.
As chief of engineering here for the Italian firm, Mr. Alassio has led a small army of ship fitters that for months has been installing the Disney Magic's piping, air-conditioning and ventilation systems. All the while, Disney inspectors have swarmed over the ship, checking and rechecking Demont's work and demanding that additional pipe supports and new welds be put in. Some areas of the ship have had to be redone four or five times -- nearly unheard of in the cruise business.
"They are too meticulous about unimportant things," Mr. Alassio says. "Maybe Disney is not ready to work on ships."
Distinct Impression
For more than a year, Disney has been promising nothing short of a reinvention of the cruise business, with not one, but two colossal ships intended to combine the grandness of past ocean liners with a theme-park experience. Meantime, it has been leaving its mark on the shipbuilding business: Now three months past its original launch date, the $350 million Magic -- featured in countless Disney ads -- has become one of the most-delayed cruise-ship projects in modern times. And outfitting of the Magic's sister ship, the Disney Wonder, is just getting under way.
The delays have spoiled the company's hopes of launching its cruise dream at the ideal time. Now, the Disney Magic is scheduled to make its debut July 30, when its target family audience is beginning to think about school, not vacations, and when the industry's softest period, the fall hurricane season, is around the corner.
Already, the company is having to eat the cost of paying crews that were hired to start on the original launch date and the lost revenue from canceled cruises. Clouding the horizon is Disney's plan to charge 30% more than competitors at a time when cruise prices have been falling. And many travel agents, on whom Disney is depending heavily to sell the cruises, aren't happy with the delays.
That said, Disney is Disney -- an entertainment juggernaut with a magic touch, and it could still become king of the high seas once its ships are up and running. With plans to appeal both to families and to couples and to attract first-time cruisers, Disney Cruise Line President Art Rodney promises to "raise the bar for the whole cruise industry."
As for the delays, Disney officially lays the blame on shipbuilder Fincantieri Cantieri Navali Italiani SpA and says there was nothing in the ship's design that was so difficult it would slow the project. And Fincantieri accepts responsibility, citing an unprecedented boom in the cruise industry that finds companies racing to build the biggest, fastest and grandest liners. Just four European shipyards build the majority of the world's cruise ships, and they are straining to keep up with the new orders.
At the same time, interviews with Fincantieri, its suppliers and even Disney's own executives monitoring the project in Italy suggest another cause: Disney's legendary perfectionism. "We've probably driven them nuts," says Robert Collins, a technical specialist for Walt Disney World Co. who nonetheless defends the company's steps. While the shipyard's goal is to build a ship as quickly as possible, he says, Disney's aim has been to make it perfect, "and sometimes that doesn't mean quickly," he says.
This isn't the first time Disney executives, including Chairman and Chief Executive Michael Eisner, have endured delays in a project to get exactly what they want; it has happened with some animated films and theme-park rides. And Mr. Eisner is expected shortly in Italy, where his critique of the Disney Magic's stage shows could result in still more adjustments, though not enough to endanger the current launch schedule.
It hasn't been an easy ride for Disney's contractors. Shipbuilders are used to cruise operators that send half a dozen executives to the shipyard to monitor the progress of construction. Disney has shuttled more than 100 people through Fincantieri's yards here in Marghera and in nearby Trieste since construction began in earnest in early 1997. Disney's focus on the little things has wreaked havoc with schedules at the shipyard and with its suppliers. Indeed, shipyard workers now call the two ships, which tower over the Marghera yard, the Disney Tragic and the Disney Blunder.
In many ways, the cruise industry seemed to pose only a modest challenge for Disney. The company's strong record over the past 15 years has given it an aura of invincibility in nearly every endeavor -- even on New York's Times Square, where a Disney store and theater now preside over an area once dominated by strip joints and porn shops. As for its cruise adventure, the company's long experience as a resort operator seems an advantage in a business that revolves around keeping people entertained on what is, in essence, a floating hotel. Disney was so confident of the project that it handed out Disney Magic countdown watches that ticked off the days and hours until the ship's early 1998 completion.
Disney officials wanted ships that could accommodate both families and couples, without either group getting in the other's way. That would mean separate deck areas, pools and dining facilities. It was Mr. Eisner who came up with the idea of building a ship that looks like a grand old ocean liner, in the tradition of the Normandie and the Queen Mary. "He didn't want just another white ship," Mr. Rodney says.
The Disney Magic design is, indeed, a throwback, with a long black hull, white cabin decks and two big red smokestacks, along with round portholes and large goosenecks, neither of which have been used on ships in years. Disney solicited bids from about a dozen shipyards, and chose Fincantieri because, as Walt Disney World President Al Weiss puts it, the shipyard understood "the uniqueness of Disney."
When Disney unveiled its plan in September 1996, it wasn't shy about suggesting that it would improve on the industry standard. During the presentation, a Disney executive suggested that the industry had gotten lazy about the basics, such as the frequently disorganized way in which passengers board and disembark from a ship. Disney promised "no chain-link fences and overflowing trash bins" at the new private terminal it was building at Port Canaveral, Fla., and entertainment to make the whole experience more festive.
Though it would have been quicker and cheaper to accept one of the shipyard's designs, Disney turned instead to Norwegian and Finnish ship designers to come up with detailed plans for the Disney Magic. But that created complications for Fincantieri, which had to translate the ship's unconventional features into reality. "It was more difficult to build," says Gianfranco Bertaglia, Fincantieri's vice director of cruise ships, "and that means more time."
For instance, a plan to equip cabins with two bathroom spaces -- for family convenience -- doubled the need for plumbing and electrical wiring. The two smokestacks -- the rear one for exhaust, the forward one purely cosmetic -- would place too much weight in the upper part of the ship, possibly compromising the vessel's stability. Fincantieri solved the problem by contracting with a yacht maker in Marghera to fabricate a fiberglass shell for each smokestack, reducing the weight, but adding to costs.
The original plans for the ship also included a casino, but Disney officials had second thoughts. Mr. Bertaglia estimates that changing the casino to Rockin' Bar D, a country-music dance area, required more than 100 new detailed drawings. "We like to design a room one time, not two times," Mr. Bertaglia says. "But if the owner is asking for something, what can you say?"
Most of the delays on the Disney Magic have occurred in the outfitting stage, after large sections of the ship were assembled on a dry dock and the completed hull and superstructure were floated out to a dock where an array of suppliers have installed the piping, furnishings, decorations and the like.
Part of the problem was that Fincantieri was attempting to build several other prototype ships at the same time as the Disney Magic. But it was Disney's attention to detail that sticks in the minds of contractors. "Disney's expectations were much higher than" any previous customer's, says Vic Dobbs, a vice president of Glantre Engineering Ltd., an electrical contractor working on the Magic's entertainment and communications systems.
Not Giving a Centimeter
Mr. Alassio, the Demont engineering chief, says Disney inspectors fretted unnecessarily over minor details; demanding, for instance, extra pipe supports if fitters installed the supports just slightly farther apart than specified. "There is more than enough strength in the plans," Mr. Alassio says. "What difference does a centimeter make?"
But Disney officials bristle at such statements. "The spec is the spec, and we get what we pay for," says Matthew Priddy, a senior vice president of Walt Disney Imagineering.
Other contractors say Disney inspectors have gotten in the way of finishing the Magic. While Disney has sent more than 100 managers to oversee the work at the shipyard, Carnival Corp., the nation's largest cruise line, usually stations six or seven supervisors on site during a shipbuilding project. Even veteran Disney suppliers have been bowled over by the company's focus on the minutiae. "It was unreal," says John Cagle, general manager of Visions In Scale Inc., an Altamonte Springs, Fla., creative-support-services firm that worked on the Disney Magic.
Visions In Scale artists labored 10 hours a day for weeks to hand paint more than five miles of narrow strips on ceiling panels to give the effect of wood branches for the ship's Caribbean-theme restaurant. In one case, Disney inspectors insisted that the artists stop work on a cartoon decoration for the Animator's Palate restaurant until they added another eyelash.
In the ship's atrium, figures of Mickey Mouse and other Disney characters adorn the walls and railings. In Lumiere's restaurant, a mural taken from Disney's film "Beauty and the Beast" covers a wall. And in Animator's Palate, workers are installing a high-tech lighting system that will turn the black-and-white room to full color as giant columns masquerading as paintbrushes appear to extract color from an artist's palette on the ceiling.
"That's not something you will find on any cruise ship," Mr. Priddy says. "It's right out of the theme-park business."
That Just-So Look
Many of these effects were all the harder to achieve because the fire-retardant plastics used on cruise ships required additional sanding and baking in special ovens to get the look Disney wanted. Strolling the ship's teak decks, Mr. Priddy points out another special effect. The ship's lifeboats -- fiberglass made to look like wood -- are painted yellow to match Mickey Mouse's red, white, black and yellow color scheme. That required that Disney obtain a special exemption from international rules requiring orange lifeboats.
According to contractors, the upper decks of the Magic are receiving the finishing touches, and just about everyone involved in the project expects the ship will meet the July 30 deadline. Whenever the Disney Magic sets off on its maiden voyage, there remains the question of how well Disney will fare in the cruise market. In this business, at least, Disney will be a newcomer in a fiercely competitive field of established players, and the Disney Magic is entering the market just as other big new vessels are, too.
The Grand Princess, delivered by Fincantieri last month, is the largest passenger ship ever built. Not to be outdone, Royal Caribbean International recently ordered vessels 30% larger than the Grand Princess, with space for 3,100 guests and diversions such as a rock-climbing wall and an ice-skating rink. "They may not have Mickey Mouse, but they are very strong competitors," says Murray Markin, president of Strategic Decisions Inc., a Boca Raton, Fla., cruise-industry consulting firm.
Others question Disney's economics. Disney has paid a price for the Magic's long, slender hull, which means roughly 20 fewer passenger cabins than it could have had with one of the wide, boxy hulls most modern cruise ships have. And by jettisoning the casino, the Disney Magic has forgone what is an important profit center for most other cruise ships.
Higher cruise prices might partly compensate. But Disney's plan to charge a 30% premium for cabin space compared with other cruise lines is unorthodox, considering that much of the industry's growth has come from vigorous discounting. Already, some travel agents are raising doubts about the strategy. "When people see the price, they back off a little," says Bill Sivillo, owner of Captain's Club Cruises & Tours in Middletown, N.Y.
All of a Piece
Disney officials insist that their cruise ships will be able to command a higher price because they are in a league of their own. And they say the ships are part of a strategy to get visitors to spend more time and money at Disney theme parks in Florida. The main Disney Cruise package will combine a multiday visit to Disney World with a three- or four-day cruise. Travelers arriving at the Orlando airport will have their luggage moved from the airport to hotel to cruise ship. Disney will even control one of the destinations, a private Caribbean island it has named Castaway Cay.
Then there is the ship itself, which already is causing a sensation even before it leaves the dock at Marghera. A steady stream of sightseers arrives by foot, bicycle, motorbike, automobile, tour bus and motor boat to view the leviathan. Parents hold their children on their shoulders to get a better look at the 15-foot Goofy hanging from the Magic's stern.
Says Koroush Yazdanfar, a cargo-ship officer gazing up at the ship with his wife and five-year-old daughter: "I've been to 35 countries and never seen anything like this." interactive.wsj.com |