HomeLifestyleBoat RefurbishmentsFeadship's Halycon, when a refit becomes something else entirely

Feadship’s Halycon, when a refit becomes something else entirely

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Captain Joe Gallegos puts it plainly: “What started as a refit became something much closer to a modified new build.”

That sentence tells the story of Halcyon better than any specification list. The 46.90-metre Feadship arrived at Kaag in May 2025 with a defined scope — a redesigned stern, a full repaint, a package of technical upgrades. Fourteen months later, she left wearing her original hull but carrying almost nothing of what was inside it.

The yacht was built in 2001 as Northern Light, and the 25 years between her original launch and her return to Feadship Refit & Services had created a gap that kept widening as work progressed. Systems that had been acceptable became inadequate against current standards. An upgrade became a replacement. A replacement became a rebuilding programme that eventually touched every major system aboard.

Feadship's Halycon, when a refit becomes something else entirely. // Photo credit: Feadship
Feadship’s Halycon, when a refit becomes something else entirely. // Photo credit: Feadship

The visible changes are substantial. A new stern arrangement now connects the main deck to the swim platform via a redesigned staircase. Hull and superstructure have been refinished entirely, the mast adapted, exterior elements updated throughout. New teak decking covers most exterior surfaces.

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Below that, the scale of the project becomes clearer. The bridge was completely modernised. Electrical systems were inspected and upgraded across the whole yacht, with new alarm, monitoring and power management systems installed. Climate control infrastructure was replaced in full, including chillers, fresh air handling units and fan coils. Guest cabins and crew areas were refreshed, marble restored, interior finishes renewed.

Feadship's Halycon, when a refit becomes something else entirely. // Photo credit: Feadship
Feadship’s Halycon, when a refit becomes something else entirely. // Photo credit: Feadship

In the engine room, the transformation was near total. Main engines and gearboxes overhauled, two new generators installed, and critical systems covering water production, ventilation, tankage, sewage treatment, heating, freshwater distribution and fuel management all renewed. Piping, cabling and supporting infrastructure replaced throughout. The underwater hull coating system was stripped back to bare metal and rebuilt from scratch.

What makes Halcyon an interesting case is not simply the scope, but the gap between what the owner expected and what they received. A knowledgeable owner, an evolving project, and a yard with the capability to keep expanding the brief — the result is a 2001 Feadship that, in almost every practical sense, is new.

Halcyon is scheduled for redelivery in July.

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Kirsten Thomas
Kirsten Thomas
Kirsten enjoys sailing and is a passionate writer based in coastal New Zealand. Combining her two passions, she crafts vivid narratives and insightful articles about sailing adventures, sharing her experiences and knowledge with fellow enthusiasts.

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