Bookings are now being taken to stay on the QE2 in Dubai

Bookings are now being taken to stay on the QE2 after it was transformed into a floating hotel in Dubai (with rooms costing between £150 and £11,000)

  • The QE2 was formerly owned by Cunard and had been the world’s most-famous and exclusive cruise liner 
  • After being retired, the ship was bought by CFC hotels and taken to Dubai to be a floating five-star hotel  
  • Some of the original features of the liner have been restored and others have been completely modernised
  • Bookings are now being taken for the floating hotel, which has more than 1,000 rooms priced up to $15,000

Bookings are now being taken for the Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2) ocean liner, which is now a floating hotel in Dubai.

The Gulf Arab emirate bought the vessel for $100million in 2007 from Cunard Line and has permanently moored it at Mina Rashid port.

And now guests wanting to stay on board the iconic ship can reserve one of the 1,300 rooms, which range in price from $200 (£150) to $15,000 (£11,400).

The Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2) ocean liner has been given a new lease of life as a floating hotel in Dubai, 10 years after the Gulf Arab emirate bought it for $100 million 

State-owned Dubai World bought the QE2 from Cunard Line in 2007, but the 2008 financial crisis delayed any plans for the 40-year-old vessel, one of the world’s most famous ships

During its time as a passenger vessel, QE2 crossed the Atlantic more than 800 times

The QE2 has been refurbished based on the original design, from its carpets to the theatre and even restaurant menus featuring dishes served in the liner’s heyday. It also has a museum and 13 restaurants and bars.

Large portraits of United Arab Emirates rulers hang opposite portraits of a young Queen Elizabeth II and Samuel Cunard, founder of the company that built the ship.


  • How to buy flights worth thousands – for hundreds: The…


    Revealed: How to cram a month’s worth of holiday gear inside…


    Peaky blunder! The wrong spot in Manchester has been…


    Iceland is the safest place to go on holiday followed by the…


    My office view is better than yours! Jumbo jet pilot shares…


    Brits can jet off to Lapland for as little as £22.99: Wizz…

Share this article

‘There is a huge following around the world for the QE2 because of how famous she is and what she stands for,’ said Hamza Mustafa, chief executive of PCFC Hotels, the Dubai World subsidiary that owns the ship, speaking earlier this year.

The QE2 first entered service in 1969 and has sailed around the world 25 times, carrying more than 2.5 million passengers.

Inside one the large dining rooms on the ship moored in Mina Rashid port in Dubai  

Large portraits of United Arab Emirates rulers hang opposite portraits of a young Queen Elizabeth II and Samuel Cunard, founder of the company that built the ship 

‘There is a huge following around the world for the QE2 because of how famous she is and what she stands for,’ said Hamza Mustafa, chief executive of PCFC Hotels, the Dubai World subsidiary that owns the ship 

The QE2 first entered service in 1969 and has sailed around the world 25 times, carrying more than 2.5 million passengers, the company said

In its new incarnation, the QE2 has 1,300 rooms, with rates ranging from less than $200 to as much as $15,000 for a suite. It also has a musueum and 13 restaurants and bars 

In the deluxe rooms on board the floating hotel, the original porthole windows remind guests of the ship’s seafaring days

Despite extensively preserving her authentic elements, the QE2 has also been fully equipped with all the latest technology

The rooms on board range in size from 17 square metres for a standard room, pictured, to 76 square metres for a royal suite

Dubai hopes the QE2 will boost tourism in the most visited city in the Middle East, which welcomed over 15 million tourists in 2017. Officials say they are targeting 20 million by 2020 

Dubai hopes the QE2 will boost tourism in the most visited city in the Middle East, which welcomed over 15 million tourists in 2017. Officials say they are targeting 20 million by 2020.

PCFC Hotels spent an additional $100 million renovating the liner and has plans to convert Mina Rashid into a complex of luxury residences and a yachting marina.

‘Although we kept everything as it was in 1969, you also have the most advanced technology in the tourism industry in Dubai,’ said Kenneth Todd, director of sales at PCFC Hotels.

‘For example, you can control everything with your phone, including check-in, room key, lights and TV,’ he said while showing reporters a duplex suite. 

Hamza Mustafa, CEO of PCFC Hotels says the opening of the restored QE2 is one of Dubai’s most highly anticipated hotel openings 

More than 2.7million man-hours have been put into the transformation of the QE2 from crumbling cruise liner to five star hotel 

PCFC Hotels spent an additional $100 million renovating the liner and has plans to convert Mina Rashid into a complex of luxury residences and a yachting marina 

The QE2 was originally registered in Southampton and operated from 1967 to 2008

more videos

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

    • Watch video

      Leisurewear brand launches the Inflatable Travel Jumpsuit


    • Watch video

      British Corner Shop – reuniting you with your home comforts


    • Watch video

      Survivors of California music bar shooting seen hugging and crying


    • Watch video

      White House says they are praying for Ginsburg after her fall


    • Watch video

      Survivors of California bar shooting describe panicked scenes


    • Watch video

      Acosta banned from the White House after heated press conference


    • Watch video

      Armed police storm site of shooting at California music bar


    • Watch video

      California music bar shooting: ‘I just heard…pop, pop, pop’


    • Watch video

      Sarah Sanders tweet of incident between Jim Acosta and WH intern


    • Watch video

      Emily Ratajkowski dances in crop top ahead of basketball game


    • Watch video

      Original C-Span footage of the Jim Acosta and WH intern incident


    • Watch video

      Three men found guilty of murdering South African student

    THE QE2: A FLAGSHIP VESSEL KNOWN FOR ITS GLAMOUR (AND EVEN A STINT AT WAR) 

    The QE2 was initially designed as a transatlantic service between her home port of Southampton and New York and was built at at John Brown’s shipyard, Clydebank. 

    Operated by Cunard, she began an almost 40-year career in 1969 and served as the flagship of the line until succeeded by RMS Queen Mary 2 in 2004. 

    During her years of service, the QE2 undertook regular world cruises and was known as being the height of glamour. 

    The QE2 under construction at the John Brown shipyard on the Clyde in 1967. She was launched a few months later by the Queen 

    Originally featuring three classes of service, the ship appealed to stars such as Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton and also captured the imagination of the less affluent, who were blocked by stairways and elevators from entering first-class spaces even for a peek. 

    Passengers dressed for dinner in formal gowns and tuxedos and top-name showbiz stars entertained. 

    In May 1982 she even took part in the Falklands War, carrying 3,000 troops and 650 volunteer crews. 

    This involved her being refitted with three helicopter pads, dormitories and fuel pipes to allow for refuelling at sea. 

    Incredibly, more than 650 Cunard crew members volunteered for the voyage to transport the members of the Fifth Infantry Brigade. 

    The vessel returned to the UK in June 1982 and was greeted in Southampton by Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.

    Source: Read Full Article