
Shown above is the modern cruiseliner The Independence of the Seas, an object of nearly inconceivable complexity whose design incorporates state-of-the-art engineering and whose main purpose is to provide pleasure to its passengers. This presumably includes aesthetic pleasure. It is interesting to consider whether a modern cruiseliner – the result of thousands of individual designers’, builders’ and engineers’ cooperative labours – could have design integrity.
A working definition of design integrity is:
- A coherent colour scheme
- Functional convergence
- Explicit structure.
In the atrium-like space shown below, called the ‘Royal Promenade’, the sense of unity gained from the ship’s exterior disappears. Façadism reigns over a mall-like ambience confected from candy-coloured lighting; vague references to 19th-century market streets; and imitation shopfronts that incorporate false wood finishes, functionally useless and culturally alienated striped awnings and neon signage.


I would direct the student of design seeking examples of design integrity on a cruiseliner to look at the engine room.
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