Between the months of December 2023 and March 2024, the ship handled more than 200 thousand people at the Rio terminal
One of the giants of this cruise season and which generated a very intense movement of tourists at Pier Mauá, the transatlantic MSC Seaview, arrives this Thursday (28) at around 8 am for its 22nd and final docking in Rio de Janeiro. The ship handled more than 200,000 people between boarding, disembarking and transit (tourists going out for a walk in the city).
On the return journey to Italy lasting 19 nights, the MSC Seaview will also dock in Ilhéus, Salvador and Maceió, the last stop in the country. It then goes to Santa Cruz De La Palma (Spain), Arrecife de Lanzarote (Canary Islands – Spain), Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands – Spain), Barcelona (Spain), Cannes (Côte d'Azur- France) and Genoa ( Portofino – Italy).
About MSC Seaview
Inspired by Miami beach condominiums, MSC Seaview has a design that emphasizes sea views and sunlight, with large outdoor areas and a 360° external promenade, which surrounds the entire ship. Its imposing atrium spans four floors and its sides feature two glass-floored walkways that offer guests spectacular views of the ocean.
The ship has large leisure areas such as a water park for children, five swimming pools and 13 hydromassages, two ziplines each 105 meters long, the Bridge of Sighs – a walkway with a glass floor 40 meters high, water slides, 17 bars and lounges, bowling, 3D cinema, Formula 1 simulator, theater with Broadway-style shows, disco, exclusive spaces for children in partnership with LEGO® and Chicco®, as well as a gym equipped with state-of-the-art Technogym® equipment, several stores for shopping and the MSC Aurea SPA. This ship also features MSC Cruises' premium product, the MSC Yacht Club.
This season, between the months of December 2023 and March 2024, MSC Seaview had Rio de Janeiro as its base and offered mini-cruises of 3 and 5 nights alternately visiting the cities of Búzios, Santos, Ilhabela, Ilhéus and Salvador. The ship also carried out 6 and 7-night itineraries with visits to Búzios, Salvador and Ilhéus, and 8-night itineraries with stops in Buenos Aires, in Argentina, and Punta Del Leste and Montevideo, in Uruguay.
Being one of the longest in recent years, the season started on October 27, 2023 and runs until May 4, 2024.