• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Spoilers Starship Design in Star Trek: Picard

Wait until you compare the corridors aboard the RMS Titanic (launched 1912) with those on the HMS Queen Elizabeth (launched 2014)...

first-class-hallway-the-henry-ford-titanic-the-artifact-exhibition.jpg

6731cd6b095b1f184232c362bb616d47.jpg
It doesn't make much sense to compare the interior of a luxury passenger liner, regardless of it's era, to the interior of a warship.
 
We're nerds who think that gives us a Master's degree in Nitpicking. I should know, I have one and use it. :lol:
I have a Master's degree...just not in that.

Yes, I know, I asked a reasonable question of an unreasonable fan group. It's Friday and St. Patrick's Day. Blame it on the leprechauns.
 
To be fair the TOS corridors always felt warmer and more inviting to me than TNG Era ones. The overhead lighting in purples, greens and other colors. The soft hum of the ship's machinery. It all looked warm and cozy.

TNG Era corridors always feel more clinical and industrial. Less inviting.
 
The SNW sets are just stunning. Gorgeous mid-century futurist aesthetic, everything in that show is absolutely on-point showing the pride and joy of that young, optimistic, expanding Federation. It perfectly captures that early sixties, atomic age sci-fi positivity.

Picard is a completely different era. It's more resonant of our own world, browbeaten by conflict and a sense of perma-crisis.

They're telling different stories and that's reflected in the sets, the design, the costumes etc.
 
Isn't it? The HMS Queen Elizabeth's definitely finished corridors look like this:

101918elizabethaw49_165839374.jpg


Whereas the Titanic's largest crew-only corridor, "Scotland Road", looked like this:

titanic_honor_and_glory_scotland_road_by_usmovers02_d8osqg4-pre.jpg




The point you're missing is that a more advanced ship does not automatically equate to a more luxurious ship. The Enterprise was the pride of the mid-23rd century fleet; the Titan-A is a second-rate exploratory vessel made out of leftover parts.
I wasn't aware that you were comparing a New Warship to an Old Luxury Liner.
(I had the Queen Mary Liner in my head by mistake)


Isn't that an Apple and Grenade kind of comparison? :confused:
Doesn't seem very apropos in this instance.
 
Isn't that an Apple and Grenade kind of comparison?

Bingo. Someone's comparing Starfleet's flagship, first among equals, best-of-the-best, with a second-rate ship made out of second hand parts, and wondering why the former ship has a larger, more elaborate sickbay than the latter. It surprises me that this needs explaining.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top