Turkey's secret city of Superyachts - ALIA YACHTS
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- Опубликовано: 18 сен 2023
- ALIA YACHTS have always had a stellar reputation for building some truly impressive vessels. I was excited at the possibility of visiting them, and was genuinely surprised by the scale of their operation.
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Turkey has a number of great builders. Their overall attention to details and flair really sets them apart. Alia seems to be leading the pack!
The shipyard seems very well organized and clean. To be that is a sign of a good builder.
I really like the Yacht Builder series. It is interesting and fulfills my need for a "techy" perspective. Thanks, David!
One word for this shipyard. Exceptional! Thanks, David!
This builder is very well organized it seems they can produce what the client wants and then some
I must admit that I had never heard of Alia. When I saw the diversity of projects, my immediate thought was jack of all trades, master of none. That was until I saw the project teams who work on a single project for it's manufacturing life cycle. That fact was reassuring.
Thanks David.
I love Alia. Especially the new toy carrier. But the rest of their yachts are also pretty nice too.
The fact that they are also featured on the Royal Huisman website in the article "ARE TWO BOATS BETTER VALUE THAN ONE?" says a lot about their quality!
It is very interesting to see the different approaches in organization different builders take.
Great tour! Can't wait to see one of their yachts full tour 😀
One word: impressive!
I love your Yard visits. This gives me/us insights in what is actually out there. Just as you said, without your channel, I would have never heard, let alone, have the opportunity to look into the kitchen of so many wonderful Yacht manufacturers
Impressive! I never seen this scale! Awesome! Good on you guys! Cheers!
Wow! Thank you David for having delivered another gem for us to view and learn about.
Tiny little custom boat yard 😂
Looks very well organized… very clean ..
wonderful to see . Thank you
I thought Turkey is only for the salvage of decommission large ship , but it's not it also for assembly,,. ALEA is have an organize offices , where their employees can work by section.. this is stunning and eye catching. LURSSEN is now on the second row.lovely I can't imagine they can build multi yatch....💞💞💞..
Turkish high-tech!
I have a folder about it (folder 5).
Escape the matrix!
@@KenanTurkiye oks.
@@reynaldo_santos 👍
Amazing facility.
Wow very impressive!
WOW, this was something else. This was a very interesting and most informative video show. Thank you for sharing this with us.
Always interesting to visit the yards 😊
Thank you for a great tour. Very interesting shipyard. I wonder how close Alia can come to famed European yards in quality? some of the great European yards have so much accumulated wisdom, especially in the thousands of small engineering and construction details that elevate a yacht to top-tier. The fabric and furniture sheds you toured did not look like they have anywhere near the capacity to equip the dozen or so major yachts in build -- I assume Alia must resort to subcontractors for some of that work. There are a number of Turkish shipyards in that area-- Bering, Bilgin among them -- so there must be a flourishing array of subcontractors supplying furniture and finished goods to all the yachts in construction.
Alia clearly has a word of mouth advertising program. They make the Yacht completely to the owners specifications which makes them a boutique manufacturer. The difference between Alia and others seems to be the "can do anything" attitude. Very impressive.
fascinating place and company. A 50m planing boat!!!! Wow, that's mental. I will be interested in seeing the finished article
Great tour thank you
State of art working, I'm surprised it's not done wider in the industry, but working on a wide range of designs, technology and demands needs dedicated teams and resources, impressive doesn't do it justice.
Bu şirketin başarılarının devamını diliyorum.
very interesting reporting, much appealing presentation. thank you!
SHED2 would be an interesting name for a boat - this project sounds unique
Tebrikler! Outstanding craftmenship goes into each detail ath this scale! amazing
Thank you 🙏
great ad lets hope Yacht Builders disclosed it it somewhere
You should visit Dunya and Magnolia the next time you are there. Also Bad Company's Damen 175 should be launchung this month. Hopefully you got to see that because I knowmyou went to Damen.
You should step up your game in the video department by getting a cinewhoop FPV drone (with covered props). There were so many opportunities for a fly thru in the buildings and ships. Even a fly thru of the wood working department would have been cool. It is a little different of a skill tho. You manually fly inside. There are no computer controls that do it for you. So it does require some practice. 5-10 hours on a Simulator would give you enough of a idea, because you already have some knowledge of drones. Very impressive facility. Clean and organized. It looks like an amazing place to have a career.
Not one cubicle wall. I love it.
Love You Sir❤
Birde seri imalat küçük yelkenlilere başlasalar keşke de uygun fiyatlı memleket ürünü alabilsek :)
Alia 😊
Thank you David. But I wonder that: How do they control the processes to achieve the intended quality level?
H ave worked on large yachts , first day... wow these are ginormous ! two months later ,...hmm I can handle this.
Heres something you may find interesting. :)
The name of my country has nothing to do with the interesting and delicious bird ''turkey''......
.....but the name of the bird does have a connection with the name of my country, let me explain. :)
Name of my country has always been Türkiye, it's been known as such since around the 1200's.
The name it self has a suffix, '' -iye '', that is Turk-iye, where the -iye suffix means 'land of/belonging to',
just like the Latin suffix of '' -ia '', which exists in such country names like
Austr-ia, Austral-ia, Latv-ia, Roman-ia etc etc again meaning 'land of/belonging to'.
Many would remember the country Czechoslovak-ia which changed it's name to Czech Republic and a few years ago changed that to Czechia (that is Czech-ia).
The Latin suffix -ia probably originates from Turkish -iye as Turkish is much older, ancient Turkish been over ten thousand years old.
Spelled in different languages in different ways to phonetically resemble (to sound like) '' Türkiye ''
we got various spellings like;
Turquía (in Spanish),
Turchia (in Italian),
Turquie (in French)
Turkei (in Germn) and
Turkey (in English)
all trying to resemble the pronounciation of ''Turk-ia'' thus Turkiye.
Mind you this was way before the animal we currently know as 'turkey'' was found by the europeans when they explored the north americas. The bird was first sent to europe from north americas in the year 1519, so up until that point there was no bird named 'turkey'....
...they came across the bird and thought it was a specie of the fowl/chicken they had been buying from the country of Turkiye at the time, so they named the bird ''Turkey Fowl'' meaning ''Turkish Chicken''.....
....just like how a dog breed is known as German Shepherd (because it's from Germany), American Bulldog, British Terrier, Greek Harehound etc etc.
In time you don't get to call the Greek Harehound as simply as ''Greek''; or you don't call the British Terrier as ''British''; or the German Shepherd as ''German'', but in time the Turkish Fowl started to be called just ''Turkey'' and later ''turkey'', and has been going on for hundreds of years.
Now in modern times, this is causing confusion, especially when we have people across the world unable to point to their own country on the map, this ''confusion over the naming'' needed to be corrected.
So my country decided to rectify this confusion that has been going on for so long and corrected the name to Türkiye, which it always was. Basically we didn't change the name of our country, we changed the mistake made in the English language. : )
So, there's some tid bit information for you to have a great day, if you read upto this point you have a great night too, ohh just have a wonderfull life. : )
Best wishes. ;)
In Norway, the name for the country Türkiye is "Tyrkia"
And the name for the turkey (bird) is "Kalkun"
@@franks.hansen6788 Yeah, the same in every language (the bird and the country name are different),
except in english because of the misuse I mentioned above in my post.
Thank you for that information Frank, and greetings to Norway.
Very nice. Similar to Bering which must be in the same neighborhood. Have to agree that a Turkish built yacht is competitive with anyone else’s.
круто!
which type of superyacht is the most comfortable?
Thanks for video.
You should get in touch with Dick Beaumont at Kraken Yachts in Bodrum.
How are they going to move some of those yachts? They have massive buildings, situated in such a way......... and in close proximity to the broad side of another..... with little open areas to get transport vehicles situated.
ummmm.........WOW....!
Very Impressive !!
Yes this company has there S@%T together !!!👍
👍🏼💙
Does this manufacturer build sailing yachts?
No shed 3?
bro just walking in the middle of the road like he owns the place right from the start
Haha! It was a car park….although some of the cars treated it like a highway 😂
Do they actually build anything other than Yachts in the Antalya free zone ?
Yes they do. ARES - military and commercial builder, now moving into yachts as well. DAMEN - yacht support vessels and other commercial boats, and a few others
Spectacular, really cool.
they keep the scaffolding guys busy. who added the "I" to ah loom in um. interesting widespread pronunciation interpretation of aluminum
I saw a lot of unfinished boats and no workers.
I love how you're implying that Shipyard spend money on fireworks when they should be spending it on quality yacht building 😅😅😅.
Where's Robin Leach when you need him?
.
if it ain't Dutch ,,, no thanks...
Not Turkey, Türkiye please. Thanks.
That's a funny way of spelling East Greece.
@@philipvecchio3292 Greece? I guess you meant Rumeli..
@@ggoddkkiller1342 I meant Asia Minor.
Nothing new.... Theyer neybours from across the road, from de same free zone, are making the same thing... They are called Berring.
Here is. Where the money from developing all those foulty buildings that dropped down like Lego structures all around their citis!!!😂😂😂 Instead of proper design and construction!!! 😂😂😂
Great company but once again you fly all the way somewhere and publish a 12 minute video this is my last time watching if they were paying you I would ask for a refund
I am not sold on Alia yachts yet. Everyone knows Turkish ship building codes are not as strict as the rest of the world.
Really? Who is "everyone"? You and the mouse in your pocket?
Not the case at all - Turkish yards can build to any codes at all, as can Italians, Germans, Dutch, etc.
You're misinformed, my friend 😂
@@yachtbuildersaren’t the codes established by insurers and standards like CE or Lloyds? Where it is actually built is irrelevant, correct?
@@brandonadams7837 Yep, nobody would care even if the ship magically appears in middle of ocean as long as it passes inspections. If not good luck selling that ship..
Oxford spiker
Payroll Ankara saray 🕌🦨🦡 máfia