bumbershoot
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
It's a common question - "what does 1864 look like?" - so I figured I'd answer it.
Please know that I don't take perfect and beautiful pictures of un-lived in staterooms. I take pictures of the room as we're using it. And we're kind of slobby. Or I am.
Also, it's really hard to get pictures of it that do it justice! I had seen pictures of it before, but when we walked in I was blown away. The pictures make it seem smaller, somehow, than it actually is.
Here is a printable page of the 12th deck.
As you can see 1864 is just to the side of looking straight forward, and it's on the port side. (I hope I got that right...I was a rower in college and that makes my understanding of port and starboard backwards, since rowers sit backwards in the boat) It's a funky wedge, which makes it big and a little bit odd. The starboard room is handicap accessible so it will be a bit different. I can't speak to how different, though. I just don't know.
The website states:
Just going to say...I have NO idea how the sofa can convert to a *double* sofabed, but people have said that this room can sleep 4 and that's the only way. There's no Pullman bed.
Not an issue for us, though, as we're just 3.
A hallway that used to be jogging track that now leads to the pano rooms.
(For a sensitive person like me, you might still smell the off-gassing of carpet paint furniture walls etc since it's a relatively new area. Others won't notice it.)
Please know that I don't take perfect and beautiful pictures of un-lived in staterooms. I take pictures of the room as we're using it. And we're kind of slobby. Or I am.
Also, it's really hard to get pictures of it that do it justice! I had seen pictures of it before, but when we walked in I was blown away. The pictures make it seem smaller, somehow, than it actually is.
Here is a printable page of the 12th deck.
As you can see 1864 is just to the side of looking straight forward, and it's on the port side. (I hope I got that right...I was a rower in college and that makes my understanding of port and starboard backwards, since rowers sit backwards in the boat) It's a funky wedge, which makes it big and a little bit odd. The starboard room is handicap accessible so it will be a bit different. I can't speak to how different, though. I just don't know.
The website states:
Larger Panoramic Ocean View Stateroom: Two lower twin beds that convert to Royal King. Double sofa bed. Vanity with sitting area. Private bathroom with shower. Floor to ceiling wrap around panoramic window, 76 inches high by 253 inches wide. (283 sq. ft.)
Just going to say...I have NO idea how the sofa can convert to a *double* sofabed, but people have said that this room can sleep 4 and that's the only way. There's no Pullman bed.
Not an issue for us, though, as we're just 3.
A hallway that used to be jogging track that now leads to the pano rooms.
(For a sensitive person like me, you might still smell the off-gassing of carpet paint furniture walls etc since it's a relatively new area. Others won't notice it.)