The general arrangement plan shows the division of a vessel into compartments using vertical bulkheads and horizontal decks. These compartments are used to store cargo, equipment, liquids, and serve as crew and passenger accommodation spaces. Key spaces include the forecastle, holds for cargo, peak tanks at the bow and stern, engine room, double bottom for storage, and superstructure housing crew areas. The navigating bridge contains navigation instruments and the wheelhouse. Bulkheads and decks divide the ship into watertight spaces, and the fore-and-aft line divides the ship into port and starboard sides.
The general arrangement plan shows the division of a vessel into compartments using vertical bulkheads and horizontal decks. These compartments are used to store cargo, equipment, liquids, and serve as crew and passenger accommodation spaces. Key spaces include the forecastle, holds for cargo, peak tanks at the bow and stern, engine room, double bottom for storage, and superstructure housing crew areas. The navigating bridge contains navigation instruments and the wheelhouse. Bulkheads and decks divide the ship into watertight spaces, and the fore-and-aft line divides the ship into port and starboard sides.
The general arrangement plan shows the division of a vessel into compartments using vertical bulkheads and horizontal decks. These compartments are used to store cargo, equipment, liquids, and serve as crew and passenger accommodation spaces. Key spaces include the forecastle, holds for cargo, peak tanks at the bow and stern, engine room, double bottom for storage, and superstructure housing crew areas. The navigating bridge contains navigation instruments and the wheelhouse. Bulkheads and decks divide the ship into watertight spaces, and the fore-and-aft line divides the ship into port and starboard sides.
The general arrangement plan shows the division of a vessel into compartments using vertical bulkheads and horizontal decks. These compartments are used to store cargo, equipment, liquids, and serve as crew and passenger accommodation spaces. Key spaces include the forecastle, holds for cargo, peak tanks at the bow and stern, engine room, double bottom for storage, and superstructure housing crew areas. The navigating bridge contains navigation instruments and the wheelhouse. Bulkheads and decks divide the ship into watertight spaces, and the fore-and-aft line divides the ship into port and starboard sides.
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GENERAL ARRANGEMENT
PLAN
SPACES AND SEPARATIONS
The general arrangement plan shows the division of a vessel into compartments in cross sections and longitudinal sections.
The compartments are formed by vertical
separations (longitudinal and transverse bulkheads) and horizontal separations (decks)
These compartments and spaces serve as storage
spaces for cargoes, stores, equipment, spare parts, liquids, etc.,
as accommodation spaces for passengers and
members of the crew, and as "domestic spaces", such as galley, pantries, dispensary
The upper deck, or main deck is often the deck
that is exposed to sea and weather. That is why the main deck is also called the "weather deck". In fact, it provides a "shelter" for all the contents of the vessel.
The extreme fore end of the vessel is called
stem. The extreme aft end is the stern.
The foremost part of the upper deck is called the
forecastle. Its bulwark is called the vauxhall. The anchor winches are situated on this deck.
The tweendeck is the intermediate
deck between upper deck and the inside bottom of the vessel, called tanktop. The tweendeck divides the vessel into separate holds. The upper holds and lower holds are the spaces that contain the cargoes.
Spaces for liquid cargoes are called
tanks.
Access to a hold can be obtained through
hatches. On freighters these hatches must be sufficiently broad for grabs to be lowered into the holds.
The foremost and aftermost spaces of the vessel are
the peak tanks. They may serve as storage spaces for ballast water and are capable of "absorbing" a part of the impact-forces that are released in case of a collision.
The anchor chain is stored in the
chain locker. It is situated over the fore peaktank.
The upper part of the fore
peaktank is called the boatswain's (or bosun's) locker, where ropes, paint and dunnage are kept.
Bulkheads are the vertical separations between holds
and spaces. The fore peak bulkhead and after peak bulkhead are the so-called collision bulkheads. These transverse bulkheads are watertight and prevent the vessel from flooding in case the vessel collides with an other vessel. Collision bulkheads are also fire-retarding or even fireproof.
Apart from transverse bulkheads tankers are also
fitted with two longitudinal bulkheads that divide the vessel into starboard- and port wing tanks and a centre tank.
The engine room is a watertight machinery space that
contains the vessel's propulsion plant.
The steering engine room must also be a watertight
compartment and is very often situated over the after peaktank. Due to large stresses that occur under the engine room and peaktanks, additional strengthenings are often inserted.
The double bottom provides strength and
storage space for fuel, lubricating oil, fresh water, salt (ballast) water and potable water.
To prevent liquids from leaking from one double
bottom tank into the other, longitudinal and transverse separations are used between the tanks. These separations, which are in fact empty spaces, are called cofferdams.
On the main deck we find the so-called
superstructure with the accommodation for the crew and passengers, the messroom, the galley and the pantry.
Identify the following
abcdefghijklmn-
After having identified the different spaces of a ship
think what their main functions are
SPACE A B C D E F
FUNCTION
G H I J K L M N
The navigating bridge contains the wheelhouse
with the control station, the chartroom where charts, pilot books and publications are kept, and the radio room.
There are the instruments for navigation, such as the
Radar, the log,
the echo sounder,
the steering compass and repeater compass
which receives and indicates the true direction transmitted electrically from the Master Compass.
The master compass is
usually situated on the monkey island, a small deck or platform over the wheelhouse.
The upper deck
The imaginary line from stem to stern is called the fore-and-aft line. It divides the vessel into a starboard- and portside (when facing forward). "Abeam" is used to indicate direction at a right angle to the fore-and-aft line. The terms used to indicate directions in which the vessel can proceed are: ahead and astern, starboard and port.
The upper deck, or main deck, is divided into the foremost
deck, called "forecastle", the centre deck, called "midships", and the aft deck, called "quarterdeck". A raised quarterdeck is called "poopdeck.The foremost part of the vessel is divided into the starboard bow and port bow . The quarterdeck is divided into the starboard quarter and port quarter.
Answer the following:
What are bulkheads? What are decks? Why is the main deck also called the weather deck? What can we store in the compartments of a ship? Where are the anchor winches situated? Where is the cargo stored in a freighter? Where is the cargo stored in a tanker? What do peak tanks serve as? Where is the anchor chain stored? What is kept in the bosuns locker? Name the watertight and fireproof spaces in a ship. What is usually stored in the double bottom? What spaces does the superstructure house? What does the navigating bridge contain? What is the fore-and-aft line?
FILL IN THE BLANK SPACES
1. The fore and aft line s.. starboard from port. 2. Decks and b. are horizontal and vertical s.. that form the holds and spaces. 3. There are three types of decks: u.., t, l.. (tanktop). 4. The upper deck is divided into f, a. and q decks. The bow is divided into s bow and p. bow. The quarters are divided into s. and p. quarters. 5. The forepeak bulkhead and the afterpeak bulkhead are w. bulkheads.
6. There are two peak tanks : the f tank and
the a.. tank. 7. Watertight spaces are : e and s. 8. The anchor chain is stored in the c.. 9. The double bottom is for s. and provides s.. for fuel, . and w. 10. Cofferdams are t. or l spaces between tanks that p.. leaking.