The boatbuilding tradition in Turkey dates back to ancient times.
Between 1304 and 1305, thanks to some Greek boatowners, the Turks were able to cross the mere 1,400 meters that separate Anatolia from the Gallipoli peninsula, thus setting foot on the European continent. A few years later, following the conquest of the region of Karesi, the Ottomans could also acquire their own fleet.
Initially, the contribution of the Greeks, the Genoese and the Venetians of the Levant was important both at manning the ships and boatbuilding skills. But over the centuries, the Ottomans gained a good reputation as shipbuilders: the town of Gallipoli, annexed in 1354 after an earthquake, and Istanbul, conquered from the Byzantines in 1453, became the headquarters of important facilities, and so coasts of the Anatolian Mediterranean and the Black Sea.
If galleys were the hard core of the Ottoman Navy until the mid seventeenth century, after the Crete war with Venice (1645-69) the Turkish fleet began to adopt galleons. Only these units, in fact, allowed to carry heavy artillery. For some time the Ottoman fleet was mixed, but after the defeat at the Battle of Cesme (1770) against the new enemy, the Russian empire, the Navy decided to give up forever the old-fashioned ships propelled by oars. From now on, only galleons were launched on the banks of Golden Horn and the other facilities across the country.
Even the Mediterranean regions have an important building tradition that continues today in other forms. If in the past on these areas were built both rowing and sailing ships that occasionally went to strengthen the Ottoman fleet in time of war, now the Antalya region is a focus of the industrial districts of Turkey where large yachts are being built. A 625,000-square meter “free trade zone” helps to save about 25% of labour costs without affecting the traditional quality of the work itself.
The cold molded method today
The building technique used to create the new 107 is the same used for all Vicem Vintage Line (classic/flybridge 52’ to 75’ – cruiser 78, 92, 107): the cold molded process. A millenary, unique construction technique which embodies all the construction methods of the Turkish historical marine tradition; a modern procedure different from traditional boat building. Based on engineered wood construction, cold-molding uses laminated mahogany (coming from managed forests) and a specific formulated epoxy resin to create the hull, decks and principal superstructures. This results in a stronger and quieter vessel with a smoother ride, with natural insulation from humidity and noise.