and already we knew about the man in the
driver's seat: he was named Anthony (not
"captain," he mentioned), in his early
twenties, engaged, grew up around the
maritime communities of Brooklyn and
Long Island. "I always figured I'd be
somewhere out here, doing something like
this," he said. He had some advice about
docking around Long Island.
There seemed to be a few things you'd
recognize in the old-fashioned cabbie. But
it's a new age, a different taxi, so what is
the protocol at the end of the ride? Tip
him? Salute him?
In Name, Mostly
In the words of the designers, Nigel Gee
Associates, "Calling the 16m catamarans
water taxis is something of a misnomer as
each [is] fitted out with 54 passenger
seats, a small refreshment kiosk and a toi-
let on the aft deck." In short, the New
York Water Taxi is a ferry. A high-speed
ferry around the lower one-third of Man-
hattan, to Queens, Brooklyn, and New
Jersey.
It's the new kid on the block, in a mar-
ket pioneered and dominated by New
York Waterway. Where Waterway started
essentially from scratch, New York Water
Taxi had them to play off.
The festive flair of the boats owes much
to the arches forward at both sides, which
extend the curve of the upper deck down
to the main deck and seem to round-off
the bow. They look aerodynamic from the
front, streamlined, speedy, and most of all,
unique. The glassed-in booth protruding
on the main deck, the one-seat wheel-
house, completes the raked effect with the
slope back from its nose. Altogether, the
extended architecture revives something
thought lost in public transportation, high
spirit and charm.
High spirits are recommended, aboard
any of New York's fast harbor ferries. The
ride certainly involves motion. In many
more directions, more suddenly, than peo-
ple would find on the subway. Movements
are sharp and abrupt, and the passenger is
glad for those 54 seats. The waters around
New York have an irregular surface and
their share of flotsam, and staccato
maneuvers are all quite normal for a fast
boat. On 11th Avenue, they'd be alarming.
With next month's arrival of the first of
two larger New York Water Taxis - Incat
designs, all-aluminum, built by Gladding-
Hearn - Coast Guard certification lingo
settles what to call the craft: "USCG Sub-
chapter T, 149 passenger Ferry and/or 99
passenger Water Taxi."
Not Just Another Happy Face
Whether there's a market for a water-
borne service more literally taxi-like - a
private personal transportation vehicle
rented by-the-mile with chauffeur,
flagged-down from the shore - is yet to be
demonstrated. For now, with whatever
sense of carnival dashes along with them,
New York Water Taxi's first half-dozen
boats also bring traits of the serious public
conveyance.
For passengers waiting at the dock,
especially a busy one like Pier 11, the
bright destination boards identify each
boat from a distance. Even if Lou Cama-
cho weren't on hand as dispatcher and dis-
penser of directions, Water Taxi's riders
would easily know when to get up for
boarding.
For such yellow craft, the New York
Water Taxis are doggedly green, a point to
make note of in a city that has grown
emissions-conscious. Tom Fox cites their
Detroit Series 60 engines as atmosphere-
friendly, while the design of the hulls
should be gentle on the water.
The question of wakes, the damage they
cause and the responsibilities they
impose, has been contentious in New
York, the pitch of the clamor over the
years rising in apparent parallel with the
increase in high-speed ferries.
New York Waterway took a lot of the
heat, particularly after impressing several
non-ferry vessels into emergency service
following the 9/11 attacks. Management
acknowledged the temporary boats' short-
comings compared to their purpose-built
ferries, assured their discontinuance as
soon as could be (now done), and demon-
strated a new tracking system that would
blow the whistle, in effect, on any Water-
way skipper going too fast.
"You're responsible for your wake," one
member of the anti-wake coalition repeat-
Water Taxi
28 • MarineNews • March, 2005
New York Water Taxi Ed Rogowski zips along at dusk. Designed by Nigel Gee Associates, powered by two Detroit Series 60s, the Derektor-built catamarans make 25 knots at top speed, 22 for service. (Photo: Don Sutherland.)
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