Wow! In my opinion this worry about "obstruction" is much ado about nothing. We had one of the alleged obstructed views (7650) on the maiden voyage, and it imposed no restriction on the view at all. Certainly does not justify reclassification of the rooms. I found it no worse than the same verandahs on the Wonder or Magic. Actually, the verandahs are much nicer design wise, since the "obstruction" material is not a slab of hull metal requiring frequent repainting, but rather a nice nonstructural, anodized, finished panel that gives more of a "German construction" feel to the verandah. Also, the safety bars across the verandah are integrated into the plexiglas panels and are finished metal also, much nicer than the "rebar" bars on the classic ships.
I think I feel better now.
My family has 12 cabins booked for a family reunion in June and dang if my cousin does not have 7650. All of our rooms are right together so no desire to relocate.
This whole family reunion cruise was my idea and it want it to go so well.
My cousin-who ironically has this room- lost her husband recently. He was a policeman killed in the line of duty. We are all trying to have some fun from so much sorrow. I sure hope her and her son are not disappointed.
Please trust me. You would never had noticed the "obstruction" if it hadn't been mentioned here. I was aware of the structure before boarding, but it never caused any obstruction for us or reduced the enjoyment of the verandah.
Please accept my condolences for your cousin and her son. Sadly and ironically, this was our first cruise in the two years since our daughter Amanda died of breast cancer, so we understand that this will be a bittersweet experience for your cousin and your family. Seems like 7650 is somewhat of a "memorial cabin". Our daughter was an avid Disney cruiser, and only because it was a new ship were we able to try it again. We are Platinum from cruises on the Magic and Wonder, but I'm not sure we can return to those ships. Too many memories!
My condolences to both of you. How wonderful to honor the memory of a loved one on a cruise like this, even tho as you said, it is a bittersweet memory at best.
I was going to ask if anyone had info re: Stateroom #XXXXX - but that really doesn't seem important anymore.
The important thing is that our grandchildren will be WITH us on a memory-making occasion - and "so what" about the view? It will be our time together that matters - not some fleeting view, or the food, or anything else...
Thank you both for putting things into perspective.
Please know that I'm saying special prayers and sending warm thoughts to both of you and your families.
My best regards,
Gretchen
Wow! In my opinion this worry about "obstruction" is much ado about nothing. We had one of the alleged obstructed views (7650) on the maiden voyage, and it imposed no restriction on the view at all. Certainly does not justify reclassification of the rooms. I found it no worse than the same verandahs on the Wonder or Magic. Actually, the verandahs are much nicer design wise, since the "obstruction" material is not a slab of hull metal requiring frequent repainting, but rather a nice nonstructural, anodized, finished panel that gives more of a "German construction" feel to the verandah. Also, the safety bars across the verandah are integrated into the plexiglas panels and are finished metal also, much nicer than the "rebar" bars on the classic ships.
Ah thanks. You know I get caught up in all the details too, but you are right. Wonderful memories will be created and I will be half sad when my cruise starts cause it will be that much closer to the cruise being over.
Wow! In my opinion this worry about "obstruction" is much ado about nothing. We had one of the alleged obstructed views (7650) on the maiden voyage, and it imposed no restriction on the view at all. Certainly does not justify reclassification of the rooms. I found it no worse than the same verandahs on the Wonder or Magic. Actually, the verandahs are much nicer design wise, since the "obstruction" material is not a slab of hull metal requiring frequent repainting, but rather a nice nonstructural, anodized, finished panel that gives more of a "German construction" feel to the verandah. Also, the safety bars across the verandah are integrated into the plexiglas panels and are finished metal also, much nicer than the "rebar" bars on the classic ships.
Mare,
Your room location has a lot more positives to it than the minor problem identified in this thread. We spend a lot of time on verandahs, and I never considered my view to be impaired. Quite honestly, the verandahs are so shallow you are seated or standing very close to the railing anyway. So any loss of visual angle is minimized. Basically, you aren't behind the panel, you are next to it. Your room is not a connecting room, so you don't have a connecting door. Plus, the hall configuration is very convenient. Since the room forward of you starts the larger family verandahs, there is a nice jog in the hall there that makes the hallway seem shorter, and makes it impossible to not find your room. Heck, you could be blind drunk, and not miss this cabin.. Just stagger or crawl down the hall til your head plows into a wall, stick your room card out to the left, and, walla, your room door is open!
Just look at the first photo, and then hold your monitor up to a mirror.Can anyone help me figure out is 6108 is one of the rooms with this so called obstruction? Looking at the deckplan it is on the other side of the ship from 6608. Does anyone have a photo similar to the first one on this post but for the other side of the ship?
Thanks
Based on this thread, I now see that every single Porthole Stateroom should be listed as an obstructed view! You see, the window does not take up the entire wall therefore my view is obstructed.
I paid for a window and I would like to see out the edges that are curved, you know! I know it's structural but still. I paid for a porthole - not an obstructed porthole.
Seriously, people. Get a grip. Your view is not obstructed. Your view is just fine. Now, if you move over to the 8 inch area and stand directly behind it, if you can fit, that is, and look straight at it, THEN your view may be obstructed. But, if like 99% of normal guests, you either sit and look straight out at the beautiful water (or port) OR stand and look straight out at the beautiful water (or port), your view will not be obstructed in any way.
Based on what I am reading lately, DCL should have a minimum of 150 stateroom categories to choose from - in fact, each stateroom should be priced differently based on location, mechanics, noise, size, verandah size, structure and whether it has a connecting door or not.
That sounds like fun!![]()