Construction of the hull of the ship started on the Turku shipyard on 28 September 2011 when Viking Line's CEO Mikael Backman started the steel production for the ship. A contest was held for the ship's name during the change of the year from 2011 to 2012, and Viking Line's board chose
Viking Grace as the winner on 17 February 2012. According to the company, the name represents style, design and feeling. Her
keel was laid on 6 March 2012, where her
keel was lowered onto nine
euro coins struck in 2012. The coins belong the
Suomenlinna commemorative series and include the entire run of euro coins (€2, €1, 50 c, 20 c, 10 c, 5 c, 2 c and 1 c) and the Suomenlinna commemorative coin. When the hull was complete and the ship was ready to be launched, the coins were picked up and welded onto the ship's mast. Viking Line announced on 10 May 2012 that it is not going to order a sister ship for
Viking Grace, so she will probably remain as a unique vessel in the company's fleet.
Viking Grace was launched from the Turku shipyard on Friday 10 August. Filling the shipyard pool was started on 10 August 2012, but the water was only filled up to the top of the support pillars at first, in order to check the ship's watertightness. At noon on 11 August 2012 the ship was moved to the equipment bay. During the night from 22 to 23 November 2012 a water damage was found on the ship, resulting from a failure in a cargo valve. This caused one of the machinery compartments to flood with one metre of water. The water was quickly pumped out of the ship after the ship's own firemen found the leak during the night, and the ship suffered no damage.
Features Viking Grace claims to be the most environment-friendly of all large cruiseferries. She uses
liquefied natural gas (LNG) and diesel as fuel, reducing emissions to the air when compared with solely diesel. The intent is to be able to refuel the ship with LNG from both Turku and Stockholm. The ship can travel two to three days with one refuelling.
Rotor sail Viking Grace is the first modern passenger ship to be fitted with a
rotor sail, which allows for hybrid usage of LNG and wind power. The technology, called Rotor Sail Solution, was developed by the Finnish company
Norsepower and has produced a fuel saving of up to 20% in favourable wind conditions. The rotor sail was first used on a voyage from Turku to Stockholm on 12 April 2018. The rotor cylinder has a height of 24.00 m and a width of 4.00 m. During operation, the cylinder is rotated by shipboard motors and creates thrust from the ambient airflow via the
Magnus effect. This form of propulsion was developed and patented by the German engineer
Anton Flettner in 1922. The rotor sail was removed during maintenance operations in 2021. According to the information officer of Viking Line it is difficult to estimate the sail's effect on LNG consumption, because conditions on the sea vary from day to day. ==Maiden voyage==