There's something to it being designed like a cruise ship
:
https://gamerant.com/star-trek-why-enterprise-d-badly-designed/

https://gamerant.com/star-trek-why-enterprise-d-badly-designed/
@Danja Not clicking on some random link, Please summarize what they said.
I don't read anything I really disagree with. But, to the author's point, the ship is meant to evoke size and awe in the viewer, demonstrating the incredible things the Federation could do. At that point, it quite well succeeded because it looks impossible.There's something to it being designed like a cruise ship:
https://gamerant.com/star-trek-why-enterprise-d-badly-designed/
It's big and oversized for its crew complement. The design itself is impractical.
Part of the reason for the "cruise ship in space" feel was that the original intention when they were creating the show was that the Enterprise-D would be on an extended (20-year?) mission exploring the unknown, so you'd have crew bringing their family with them, you'd have more luxurious quarters, you'd have more places for people to hang out and relax in their downtime. But they kind of abandoned that idea pretty quickly, and the Enterprise became the Federation's "flagship," they reintroduced the Romulans as adversaries, and the kids & families aspect was downplayed except when they wanted to tell a story about it (e.g. "The Bonding," anything involving Alexander).
As for the question? Loved the Enterprise D, it is HUGE like you could go for 5x the crew and still be good.
...blue barrels full of junk to fall on Worf, nitroglycerin to lubricate the exploding com-panels, foam rocks and ceiling braces to fall on the bridge crew... You know, the essentials.
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