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Revision as of 02:04, 23 April 2015

Cotai Water Jet
Company typePrivate company
IndustryFerry services
Founded2007
Headquarters
Websitehttp://www.cotaiwaterjet.com
Cotai Water Jet
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese金光飛航
Transcriptions
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpinggam gwong fei hong
Portuguese name
Portuguesejacto de água cotai
English name
EnglishCotai Water Jet

Cotai Water Jet is a company that operates high-speed ferry services between the Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau. It is one of the three companies operating high-speed ferry services between the two territories - the others being TurboJET, and New World First Ferry (Macau). The Taipa Temporary Ferry Terminal in Macau is used by this ferry route to enable easy access to The Venetian Macao in Cotai, although it is also chosen by some because of its proximity to Taipa, Cotai and Coloane in comparison to the Terminal Marítimo used by the other two operators on the Macau Peninsula. The Cotai Water Jet is a subsidiary of Las Vegas Sands.

Current Routes

Fleet

Cotai Water Jet's fleet are built by Austal Shipyard of Australia.

Brand of Vessels

  • Austal 48: 47.5m length, 70 (net) tonnes, 411/413/417 passengers cartamaran.[5] Propelled by waterjets powered by quadruple MTU 16V 4000 M70 diesel engines, rated at 2320 kW each.[5] Cruising speed at 42 knots. Built by Austal Shipyard of Australia.[5]

List of Vessels

There are all together 14 vessels:

  • THE GRAND CANAL SHOPPES
  • THE VENETIAN
  • THE COTAI STRIP EXPO
  • SHOPPES COTAI CENTRAL
  • COTAI CENTRAL
  • SHOPPES FOUR SEASONS
  • THE PLAZA
  • COTAI STRIP COTAIARENA
  • COTAI STRIP COTAIGOLD
  • GOURMET DINING
  • MARCO POLO
  • ST. MARK
  • CASTELLA SQUARE
  • DI MODA SQUARE

Rented vessels (all returned in early 2009)

  • Lian Shan Hu: 39.5m length, 338 passengers cartamaran. Propelled by waterjets powered by twin MTU 16V 396 TE 74L diesel engines, rated at 1580 kW each. Maximum speed at 32 knots. Built by Austal Shipyard of Australia.
  • Nan Gui: 40.1m length, 338 passengers cartamaran. Propelled by waterjets powered by twin MTU 16V 396 TE 74L diesel engines, rated at 1825 kW each. Maximum speed at 32 knots. Built by Austal Shipyard of Australia.

Ticketing Offices

Ticket counter of Cotai Water Jet(operated by CKS) at Shun Tak Center, Sheung Wan, Hong Kong

This is a list where passengers can buy tickets to Cotai Water Jet.[6]

Macau

  • Cotai Travel (Shop1028)
  • Concierge Desk (Hotel Lobby, Level 1)
  • Concierge Desk (Hotel West Lobby, Level 1)
  • Cotai Ticketing™ North and South Box Offices (Cotai Arena™, Level 1)
  • Customer service counter (Di Moda Street at The Grand Canal Shoppes)
  • Cotai Ticketing Call Center (Macau: +853 2882 8818 / Hong Kong: +852 6333 6660)
  • Guest Services Counter, Ground Level
  • CotaiTravel (Shop1030)
  • Concierge Counter (Conrad Macao Lobby, Cotai Central)
  • Concierge Counter (Holiday Inn Macao Lobby, Cotai Central)
  • Concierge Desk (Sheraton Macao Hotel Main Lobby, Cotai Central)
  • CotaiTicketing™ Box Office (Holiday Inn)
  • CotaiTicketing™ Box Office (Sheraton Hotel)
  • Cotai Water Jet Ticketing Counter (Departure Hall)
  • Cotai Water Jet Ticketing Counter (Counter 30-31, Level 2)

Hong Kong

  • Shop 305N, 305D, 304A Shun Tak Centre, 200 Connaught Road, Sheung Wan, HK
  • Shop 1-5A, 1/F China Ferry Terminal, 33 Canton Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon
  • Transfer Area E2, Level 5, Hong Kong International Airport Passenger Terminal Building One

Accidents

  • On 29 August 2009, a Cotai Water Jet bumped into a giant buoy and broke the catamaran windows with 1 injured.[7]
  • On 4 September 2009, THE VENETIAN collided with a sampan at Zhuhai waters killing 1 person.[8]

See also

References