
New era of cruising: Celebrity Cruises is premiering a new cruise liner, Celebrity Edge, with a new design that it hopes will revolutionize the cruise ship industry.

Under construction: CNN Travel visited the new ship under construction at the Chantiers de l'Atlantique shipyard in France.

Industry first: The ship is designed to get travelers as close to the ocean as possible. Its innovative design is the product of an industry first -- it was entirely designed using 3D technology.
![<strong>New abilities</strong>: "Every ship in the last decade has used 3D renderings [...] to understand what they're building," says Richard Fain, Chairman and CEO of Royal Caribbean Cruises, Celebrity's parent company. "But this was entirely done in three dimensions and it's given us the ability to do things that you couldn't do before."](https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/180914163653-p1080792.jpg?q=w_2560,h_1440,x_0,y_0,c_fill/h_447)
New abilities: "Every ship in the last decade has used 3D renderings [...] to understand what they're building," says Richard Fain, Chairman and CEO of Royal Caribbean Cruises, Celebrity's parent company. "But this was entirely done in three dimensions and it's given us the ability to do things that you couldn't do before."

Ship's core: The Grand Plaza is the core of the ship. The impressive chandelier is already completed and is a striking centerpiece for Celebrity Edge.

Interior vision: The interior of the ship was the work of Paris designer duo Jouin Manku and is said to fuse modern touches with inspiration from the Golden Age of transatlantic travel.

Hard work: It's the details, big and small, that make the interior impressive, but before the glamorous design of the ship comes the engineering work.

Upside down: Fain explains that the ship is assembled like Lego bricks, ceiling first. "They start the blocks upside down and they do them in small sections and then they flip them over, which I always find fascinating," he says.

Almost ready: When CNN Travel visited Celebrity Edge, the ship was 95.6% complete. "That doesn't sound like much to go, but the part to go, that is all the visible part," says Fain.

Bigger sizes: The ship isn't the largest in the market, nor does it want to be. "It was never our intention with Edge to have a bigger ship," Celebrity Cruises CEO Lisa Lutoff-Perlo tells CNN Travel.

Cocktails ahoy: There are some overly opulent touches. For example, the two hot tubs on the pool deck are shaped like giant martini glasses.

Moving spine: One of the most unusual aspects of Celebrity Edge's design is how the spine has been repositioned. "Ships have traditionally been built with what's known as an exoskeleton, so the skeleton's on the outside of the ship," says Fain.

X marks the spot: For Celebrity Edge, the spine has been moved to the inside of the ship, allowing floor-to-ceiling windows wherever possible.

Light and airy: "That's why there's so much light on the ship because you don't need all that seal on the outside," says Fain, pictured here on Celebrity's roof garden.

Re-centering: "The ship doesn't care whether that strength is in the center or on the outside and by going to the center it allowed us to have that light," says Fain of the design.

Infinite verandas: In the bedrooms, the designers have installed "infinite verandas" in place of traditional balconies. In each room, buttons can be pressed to divide the veranda from the bedroom and open the large windows onto the ocean, as this artistic rendering demonstrates.

Magical spot: One standout feature is the so-called Magic Carpet. Seen from below, it's a bright orange, multi-purpose, moving extension to the ship.

Moving space: The space moves up and down the edge of Edge: "It goes to deck 16, which is all the way at the top," senior vice president of hotel operations Brian Abel tells CNN Travel. It can also be found as low as deck 2, for tendering purposes -- helping passengers on and off the ship.

Tendering: It was originally planned as a tendering platform to make that experience better. "Than we realized we only use that like 20% of the time," says Abel. "So what else are we going to do with it? So that's when we came up with the idea of making it move as a restaurant or extension of the pool deck or special dinner."

Cruising for all: The Celebrity team also hopes the ship will appeal to cruise skeptics as well as seasoned cruisers. "They see the spaciousness of it, they see the beauty of it, they see the experiences that we're creating and they say: 'Wow I might not have sailed on a ship before, taken a cruise before, but I definitely want to be on Edge,'" says Lutoff.


