    
Write a Review on this Ship Public AreasLiberty of the Seas has 15 passenger decks, although the top three are parts of deck rather than extending the full length of the ship.
So deck 15 is just the Skylight Chapel, where couples can get married while the ship is in port and where religious services are held; deck 14 has the Viking Crown Lounge and Olive & Twist dance club and a couple of function rooms; deck 13 is dedicated to sports, with the FlowRider surf park, nine-hole mini-golf course, 43-feet-tall rock-climbing wall and sports court.
Adventure Ocean kids’ and teens club is on deck 12, with separate rooms for different ages for children aged three to 17, as is the day spa, which offers massages, facials and body wraps by Steiner. A jogging track goes around the outside of the deck.
Deck 11 has the H2O Zone waterpark, two swimming pools open to all and a third adults-only pool in the Solarium. The whirlpools are also in the Solarium. Further forward is the gym, with treadmills, cycles, weights, a fitness studio and full-size boxing ring.
The next five decks are cabins, but there’s a concierge club on 10, an internet café on eight, a library on seven and a business services centre on six.
The Royal Promenade, one of the most popular places on the ship, cuts through deck five. This is a “street” (the lighting changes to reflect the time of day), four storeys high, with pubs, shops, cafés, a Ben & Jerry’s ice-cream parlour and barbers shop to the left and right. Forward of the Promenade is the Sphinx lounge for live entertainment and the more intimate Connoisseur’s Club. Guest relations and shore excursions desk are also on this deck.
A huge casino, packed with tables and slot machines is on deck four, along with the Schooner Bar and Bolero’s Lounge. The photo gallery here is the place to come in search of pictures taken by the ship’s snappers.
Catacombs nightclub is on deck three, which is also the ground floor of the three-deck-high main restaurant; the ice-skating rink is deck two, which is the ground floor of the three-deck theatre and also has a conference centre.
CabinsThe ship has 1,800 cabins, of which 1,077 are outside and 832 have a balcony. Some 172 of the 558 inside cabins have a view over the Royal Promenade.
Most are for two people, but each grade of cabin offers family rooms. These will have either a sofa bed, an extra bed that drops out of the ceiling, or both. The larger family suites have separate rooms.
Cabins vary in size from 152 square feet for an inside room, to 200 square feet for a large ocean view room and 214 square feet for a superior balcony with a 68 square foot veranda.
The six grades of suite range from junior suites for up to three people, royal family suites for up to eight people and the giant 1,215 square feet Presidential family suite with room for 14 people across four bedrooms. Its balcony is 810 square feet and has a whirlpool and dining area.
Cabins and suites have 24-hour room service, flat-screen TV on which you can book excursions and check your shipboard account, direct-dial telephones, hair-dryers and wi-fi internet access. Suites have fridges or minibars and some have complimentary access to the Concierge Club.
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Ship Info Year Entered Service: 2007 Onboard Currency: USD Nationality of Crew: Scandinavian and American officers, international crew. No. of Crew: 1360 No. of Passengers: 3600 Tonnage: 160000 Passenger/crew ratio: 2.6 Passenger/space ratio: 44.4
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