The 29m Project Ouzel is a modern interpretation of a classic pilothouse cutter. The yacht is being built at the Rockport Marine yard in Maine for highly experienced sailors from New England, USA under the experienced management of MCM. The owners, who had a previous yacht, a 64-footer from the Baltic Yachts yard, gave a brief for Langan Design Partners of Newport, RI. The owners’ plan is to use the yacht for exploration cruising as well as coastal cruising and perhaps competing in a regatta at some point in the future.
Project Ouzel lines must reflect the timeless elegance of a more classic style of yachting, but her rig and keel suggest there is more to her than meets the eye – it’s a balance reflected in her combination of classic sheerline, low-profile deckhouse and generous overhangs with a more performance-orientated rig, Park Avenue boom and modern keel.
“The design was entirely bespoke and the result of design meetings to ensure we ended up with a design that ticked all the clients’ boxes,” says Peter Wilson, co-founder and Partner of MCM. “She is perhaps a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” he adds, “as above the waterline she is a current interpretation of a classic pilothouse cutter, but below the waterline she has a modern underbody featuring a high-aspect rudder and a generous 3.65m draft keel.”
For the interiors, the owners turned to Mark Whiteley, his portfolio included two interiors that really appealed to the owners’ aesthetic – the 56-meter called Aquarius and the 36.4-meter Nautor Swan Audrey the First. The result is a simple and functional layout tied to a design sensibility that gives the interior a superyacht feel yet stays in keeping with the classic elements of the yacht. Bright painted upper panels will be complemented by stunning mahogany cabinetry in an airy mix of tradition and modern design.
Project Ouzel’s hull is a true hybrid of traditional and modern materials combined in a thoroughly modern approach, with a cold-molded wood construction using Douglas Fir and Western Red Cedar – a technique, which happens to be a specialty of Rockport Marine.
However, her powerful sail plan means significant forces are imposed on the structure, so the entire midsection is made from high-strength carbon, which also reduces weight, reduces the volume of the internal structure, and provides ample internal tanks. The engineering prowess continues to the systems, which will feature an EPA Tier-3 compliant 400hp engine that will deliver more than 1,000 miles under power at speeds over 10 knots. There is also a state-of-the-art hydraulic power pack operated off a 48V battery bank, backed up by a 32kW generator.
Construction on the hull of Project Ouzel is well underway, with the provisional delivery date set for July 2025.
The MCM team boast 35 years of experience across a diverse range of projects since the company’s founding in 1988 with overseen the builds of 106 yachts, including 86 sailing yachts, for a combined length of 10,776 feet (3,284m).
Credits: MCM Newport