SENESCO Becomes Senesco Marine
The Southeastern New England Shipbuilding Corporation (SENESCO) has capped years of progress and strong growth with a change in name and investment in the future. The company formally changed its name to Senesco Marine, and to prove that the metamorphosis is much more than skin-deep, has instituted a sweeping new design and build process to enhance the speed with which the company can design, build and deliver barges.
New CEO Gary C. Schuler said "Our most recent double hulled barge was built for a west coast customer and we continue to see increased activity out of our New Orleans office. The change to Senesco Marine makes sense for us based on our growing reputation as a leading national shipbuilder." Schuler touted the company's new partnership with Guarino & Cox, a respected naval architecture firms.
"We realize that expedited construction and on time delivery have become increasingly important as our customers move to comply with federal requirements for double hulled barges," said Schuler. "On time delivery starts with quality ship designs and we're pleased to have Guarino & Cox as strategic design partners. Not only is Guarino & Cox providing us with top notch designs, but they're designing to maximize efficiency and speed up construction time based on the operation of our shipyard." Greg Cox, a principal in Guarino & Cox, said he was pleased to be working with Senesco Marine on the design of the company's double-hulled barges. "As a relatively new company, Senesco Marine has developed a tremendous reputation as one of the leading barge builders in America," said Cox. "We're honored to be working with them as a design partner in their new on time design, build and delivery process." In addition to its strategic partnership with Guarino & Cox, Schuler said the company has taken a number of other key steps at the shipyard to make the new on time design, build and delivery process a reality.
Another 80,000-Barrel, Double-Hulled Barge Contract Senesco Marine signed a second contract with Fall River, Mass.-based Sea Boats, Inc. to build a 80,000-barrel, double- hulled barge. Construction will be complete by April of 2004. Earlier this year, Sea Boats launched Tennessee, its first 80,000-barrel, double-hulled barge built by Senesco Marine. Sea Boats then needed another such barge built, and fast. "Because of new Federal guidelines, our customers must replace their single-hulled barges with double-hulled vessels," explained Schuler. "In many cases, the new barges must be in place by 2005. To accommodate our customers, we've maximized our production capacity by implementing a new, on-time design, build, and deliver process." Don Church, an executive with the company, said. "The people at Senesco Marine are not only great to work with, they're exceptionally talented.
So our decision to return to them ...
was an easy one." For more information on Senesco Marine Circle 28 on Reader Service Card
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Other stories from October 2003 issue
Content
- Blount Delivers 130-ft. CAT page: 10
- 10,850-HP AHTS Joins Seabulk Offshore Fleet page: 11
- Sibu: Ferries for Asia page: 12
- Grimaldi-Naples Launches RoRo Grande Amburgo page: 14
- U.S. Territorial Sea and Other Lines in the Water page: 16
- Varian, PARC Receive Security System Funding page: 22
- Wartsila to Concentrate on Marine and Service page: 22
- LPG Tanker Repaired, Modernized and Converted page: 24
- Financier Calls for a New Approach on Standards page: 26
- Bollinger Completes Major Conversion of Ned Ferry page: 27
- SENESCO Becomes Senesco Marine page: 28
- SPS Overlay: Fix Steel Decks Faster page: 30
- Team UMC Helps Navy Ship With Innovative VSP Switch page: 33
- B+V Reports Busy Repair Docks in August page: 34
- Extensive Fantasy Refurb page: 35
- New Tooling, Training Solutions Target Shipbuilding page: 36
- Dubai Drydocks Completes Conversions page: 38
- Solutions in Panama page: 38
- Insurer Not Liable for Repairs Beyond Warranty page: 39
- The Evolution of Marine Painting page: 40
- Grand Bahama Shipyard Receives Quality Mark page: 41
- Brunei Develops New Coating System page: 42
- New Marine Technology Set for Debut at Amsterdam Exhibition EURO PORT 2003 page: 46
- Gesilco: Built to last page: 48
- Radio Holland page: 51
- Nauticast AG page: 51
- Autoship Continues To Make Waves page: 54
- Maxsurf Links with ShipConstructor page: 54
- Provide Solutions Introduces 3D Laser Scanning page: 56
- Nupas-Cadmatic Offers Versatile Shipbuilding Applications page: 57
- ABS President Discusses Bulk Carrier Safety page: 58
- Integrity in a New Era page: 60
- More Power to the Dredgermen page: 60
- CNG Carrier One Step Closer page: 61
- JJMA on LSC Team page: 63
- A Legacy Spanning Three Generations page: 64
- World Maritime Tech Exhibition Set for San Francisco page: 66
- Juniper's Hinges Go Low and High page: 68
- Long Beach Pilots Go Far Out With New Boat page: 72
- Urethane's Products Are Thick-Skinned page: 76
- SES Launches "Smart" Solution page: 77
- BP's Shafts are Oil-Free page: 80
- Vosta Debuts Universal MK3 Bow Coupling Installation page: 81
- Safety Not Optional page: 81
- VENTIQ Offers Innovative Approach to Cargo Tank Venting page: 82
- Walform M Plus: Leak Free pipe connections page: 82
- Employees' Invention Improves Valve Process page: 83
- New High-Pressure Pumps page: 83