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Queen of Coquitlam

Coquitlam Approaching HB.JPG
History
CanadaCanada
Name: Queen of Coquitlam
Namesake: Coquitlam, British Columbia
Owner: British Columbia Ferry Services Inc.
Operator: British Columbia Ferry Services Inc.
Route: Departure Bay - Horseshoe Bay
Ordered: March 1974
Builder: Burrard Yarrows Ltd. of Vancouver, BC
Cost: CAD$ 20 million
Yard number: 219
Launched: December 1975
Completed: July 1976
In service: 1976
Refit: 2003
Homeport: Vancouver, BC
Identification:
Status: ship in active service
General characteristics
Class and type:

C-class RORO ferry

Tonnage: 6,503
Length: 139 m (456 ft)
Beam: 27.08 m (88.8 ft)
Draft: 5.331 m (17.49 ft)
Decks: 3 car decks, 1 passenger deck, 1 sun deck
Installed power: 11,860 hp (8,840 kW)
Propulsion: Two MaK 12M551AK
Speed: 20.5 knots (38.0 km/h; 23.6 mph)
Capacity:
  • 1,470 passengers
  • 362 cars
  • 345.0 tonnes diesel fuel
Crew: 30

C-class RORO ferry

MV Queen of Coquitlam is a C-class ferry in the BC Ferries fleet, launched in 1976. She first operated on BC Ferries' Horseshoe Bay to Departure Bay route. For most of her life, she has been a replacement/relief vessel on all the major routes serving the Greater Vancouver Regional District. She is named for the city of Coquitlam.

This ship has the distinction of being the only BC Ferries vessel to have issued a mayday from dry dock when, during a 1980 maintenance layover, she tipped over and landed on her side in the Burrard Shipyards drydock, causing approximately CAD $3 million in damage. In November 2002, she started a major rehabilitation that would extend her service life by another 20 years. The refurbishment, costing CAD $18 million, improved her passenger services with some minor work to her engineering. Additionally, over 100 tonnes of steel was either added or replaced, and four evacuation stations were installed. She returned to service by June 2003.

Upon return, Queen of Coquitlam started regular service on Horseshoe Bay-Departure Bay route. Queen of Oak Bay, which had a similar refit to Queen of Coquitlam, displaced her from her route in the early Summer 2005. She currently operates as a secondary vessel on Langdale - Horseshoe Bay in the summer, as well as a replacement vessel for any of the other C class or Super C-class vessels when they are sent for refitting.


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