Published: 16:43, July 29, 2021 | Updated: 22:40, July 29, 2021
Genting starts HK 'seacations' for travel-starved locals
By Bloomberg

The Genting Cruise Lines Genting Dream cruise ship while berthed in Hong Kong on July 28, 2021. (PHOTO / BLOOMBERG)

Genting Hong Kong Ltd., the operator of giant cruise ships, is piling into the trip-to-nowhere game in its home market, offering “seacations” to Hongkongers who’ve been stuck in the city because of onerous COVID-related travel restrictions.

Genting Dream will set sail Friday evening. Destination: not very far.

That might be enough for locals wanting to escape typically tiny apartments or try something other than a weekend in a hotel, the main getaway option since strict quarantine rules put the brakes on international travel. Bookings have been encouraging, according to Genting, with three sailings scheduled per week offering two- or three-night packages.

Genting Dream will journey into international waters - allowing its casino and duty-free shops to open - but won’t come ashore anywhere other than Hong Kong

Hong Kong has come much later than the likes of Singapore and Taiwan to the cruise-to-nowhere trend, with the government announcing in late May that cruises could resume at the end of July after being suspended since February 2020. Genting Dream will journey into international waters - allowing its casino and duty-free shops to open - but won’t come ashore anywhere other than Hong Kong.

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In keeping with government requirements, capacity is capped at 50 percent and passengers need to be fully vaccinated and submit negative COVID-19 test results. Given the size of the ship, it will still host more than 1,000 people per cruise, along with about 900 staff. There’ll be a 12-hour turnaround for cleaning when the vessel returns to port, compared with three or four hours normally.

This photo shows passengers in a restaurant on board the Genting Cruise Lines Genting Dream during a media tour of the cruise ship while berthed in Hong Kong on July 28, 2021. (PHOTO / BLOOMBERG)

Stretching 335 meters, Genting Dream is longer than the Eiffel Tower is tall. The German-made ship now sits at Kai Tak Cruise Terminal, a place so empty it’s reminiscent of zombie horror flick 28 Days Later, which is also the length of time travelers returning to Hong Kong from virus hotspots must spend in quarantine and home monitoring.

In keeping with government requirements, capacity is capped at 50 percent and passengers need to be fully vaccinated and submit negative COVID-19 test results

After baggage and security checks at the terminal, passengers will encounter temperature-monitoring machines and hand-sanitizer dispensers before boarding. They’ll also wear wristbands and contact-tracing devices. The abundance of caution reflects Hong Kong’s approach to battling COVID-19 and an eagerness on Genting’s part to stick to the rules and make the cruises work.

The company, part of Malaysian billionaire Lim Kok Thay’s Genting Group, warned in May about its ability to continue as a going concern and posted a US$1.7 billion loss last year. Genting Hong Kong has since said it has access to new loan facilities to shore up capital.

Genting already resumed cruise operations in Taiwan and Singapore last year, but those haven’t been without challenges as both places battle a resurgence in virus cases. Cruises on the Explorer Dream have been suspended since May to Aug 15 due to Taiwan’s outbreak, while passenger capacity on the World Dream in Singapore has been temporarily cut to 25 percent from 50 percent and people must eat in their cabins. That ship also had to curtail one cruise earlier this month after someone tested positive.

READ MORE: COVID-19 scare on cruise ship shows perils of resuming tourism

An isolation room at the medical center on board the Genting Cruise Lines Genting Dream is pictured during a media tour of the cruise ship while it's berthed in Hong Kong on July 28, 2021. (PHOTO / BLOOMBERG)

Genting Dream has a clinic with one doctor and three nurses as well as a ship sanitation officer. Other facilities include a rooftop swimming pool with six waterslides, a zipline, climbing wall and more than a dozen restaurants and bars. A meal at its Silk Road Chinese restaurant during a tour Wednesday evening featured dishes including chilled razor clam, fish maw, braised sea cucumber and hairy crab.

The plushest rooms are two 224-square-meter “villas” with views over the ship’s bow and private jacuzzis, though those are off limits due to COVID-19 rules.

The jacuzzis beside the main swimming pools are cordoned off too - another reminder that cruise holidays may never be the same again. For now though, it’s a matter of sailing a fine line between keeping COVID-19 at bay and bringing the punters in.