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QM2 Luxury Cruise Guide
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Cunard Cruise Line - Queen Mary 2
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QM 2 Reservations: +1-702-501-7105
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Features, Size, Activities, and Lineage
2,620 to 3,090 Privileged Guests
OF SUPERLATIVE COMPARISONS
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Cunard's newest ocean liner, Queen Mary 2, is the largest, longest,
tallest and widest passenger ship ever conceived. It is fitting that this
should be so, because Cunard Line has a long tradition of creating ships
that command the superlative in comparison to all others. Standing beside
this majestic ship at quayside, visitors behold a structure as tall as
a 23-story building. She is over a hundred feet longer than the Eiffel
Tower is tall, and over four city blocks in length. If she were afloat in
the pool at the foot of Niagara Falls, her stack would rise over 20 feet
above the rim. For over 60 years, there has
been a Cunard "Queen" sailing the oceans. Queen Mary 2 is the first
such liner built in a generation and is the worthy heir to the company's
160-year heritage. She embodies all the thoroughbred characteristics of her forebears: the generous
thrust of her raked prow, the stepped superstructure, both fore and aft, the
lean dimensions that allow for greyhound speed whilst traversing the North
Atlantic. Seen FROM the outside, she looks like what she is: a
purpose-built craft for sailing rapidly between points on the globe.
Within her hull, however, QM2 hides a multitude
of delights as spectacular and pleasurable as they are innovative and
ingenious. Stepping aboard, guests enter a realm of sweeping spaces and
grand designs, the likes of which have not been seen for decades. Passengers
will enjoy a generosity of spaciousness that rivals or surpasses that of
ultra-luxury small ships. Just 2,620 guests sail on this
150,000-gross-ton vessel. They stroll the broad, one-third-mile-long
teak promenade deck that encircles the entire ship, stopping to talk with
friends relaxing on traditional steamer chairs. Guests enter a lobby that
towers over three decks high, graced with a sweeping grand staircase and
monumental works of art. They will travel in accommodations that vary FROM
the merely commodious to the shamelessly extravagant. The standard cabins