Interview: MYS General Director Gaëlle Tallarida

As head of the world’s most prestigious yacht show, Gaëlle Tallarida had something even more challenging to overcome this year than a worldwide pandemic – the high expectations of exhibitors.
For 11 years, Gaëlle Tallarida has been the General Director of the world’s most prestigious yacht event, the Monaco Yacht Show (MYS). With her team of 17 in Monaco, Tallarida works tirelessly throughout the year to deliver a show which has grown exponentially since its inception three decades ago.
But never has there been a more challenging year than this one. On the back of a cancelled MYS in 2020 due to the Covid pandemic, organisers promised to come back not necessarily bigger, but definitely better.
“Covid and the cancellation of last year was an opportunity for us and the industry to work together on what could be changed to make the show more efficient,” Gaëlle Tallarida tells Monaco Life. “The brokers and the shipyards really wanted to focus on private clients, and our goal is always to attract more owners and potential owners for yachts and charterers, but we also have a lot of B2B at the show which is an important element, so we had to make that more efficient too.”

A Birdseye view of the 2021 Monaco Yacht Show, photo by McClic

The result was a yacht show with clearly defined exhibition areas designed to improve the visitor’s experience. A new sailing yacht area featured 12 large sailing yachts, while the new Yacht Design and Innovation Hub offered visitors a better understanding of the construction process and a look into the future of superyacht design. It was also an opportunity for potential clients to meet with the experts who would design their future yacht.
In the end, the show attracted 440 exhibitors and 101 superyachts, half of which were launched in 2020 and 2021, reaching an estimated total worth of €3.6 billion. Featured yachts included 37 new launches and 14 superyachts measuring over 70m in length.​​​​​​​
“Personally, I am very happy with the show this year,” says the general director. “It has been really challenging because of Covid, and there was a particularly difficult moment in Spring when it came time for exhibitors to book spaces. Some wanted our guarantee that the show would definitely go ahead, something we could not give, so we had a very hectic summer finalising everything for the show. But in the end, it was very positive, and even if everyone was wearing a mask, we saw happy people, happy eyes behind those masks.”
Monaco was the first major international yacht show since the pandemic began, an opportunity to gather together industry professionals amidst a surprisingly booming market.
And while a change in ticketing system this year and increase in price meant less visitors dockside, that is exactly what the organisers had hoped for.
“The problem we had in the past, is we have been a victim of our success,” says the general director. “There were too many people coming to the show, even though it is not a general interest show. But this year, we had 19,000 visitors compared to 31,000 in 2019. Exhibitors said there were less people this year, but more serious leads, which is what they asked for.”
Yachts lining the harbour of Monaco during this year’s show, photo by ImagIN

Yacht owners, future yacht buyers and charterers were also afforded more VIP treatment, as requested by the industry. With their anonymous, invitation-only tickets they were given exclusive access to the Dockside Area on day one of the show, free to discover the yachts and tenders, meet with designers, brokers and shipyards without the crowds. Throughout the show, they were also able to skip the queues at the general entrances and be welcomed in designated lounge areas, contributing to the overall experience for these important clients.
All eyes were on Monaco for those four days in September, not least because of the multitude of jaw-dropping superyachts filling the harbour. It was an opportunity for the Principality to show that business can move forward in these difficult times. The organisers of the MYS had worked extensively with the government’s health department and doctors in establishing health protocols for the -day show, and while the long queues and mandatory masks garnered some criticism, most participants, says Tallarida, understood that it was necessary.
“We are proud to say that there was not a single case of Covid linked to the Monaco Yacht Show,” reveals the general director. “Of all of the people tested during the show or on their way back to their country, not a single case was detected.”
It is another feather in the cap of organisers, who appear to have pulled off a very successful Monaco Yacht Show in very difficult circumstances.
 
Click on the gallery below to see more pictures from this year’s Monaco Yacht Show…
 

New Space Affairs Office shooting for the stars

Monaco is now home to a new Space Affairs Office, created as a single point of contact for all things space related. It is also a hub for companies in the industry looking to base themselves in the Principality.

After extensive talks with players in the industry, the government of Monaco has created the Space Affairs Office (Le Bureau des Affaires Spatiales) to help facilitate the business development of those whose activities include manufacturing telecommunications and earth observation equipment, and ‘astromobiles’, or rover, gear.

The office is intended to be a one-stop-shop for space undertakings, reporting to the Interministerial Delegation for the Digital Transition. This opening is a milestone event for the country, paving the way for the development of space-focused businesses that wish to use the Principality as a home base under a simple administrative framework.

At an international level, the Office of Space Affairs will ensure the Principality is represented with foreign counterparts, thus promoting partnership opportunities for the benefit of the participating specialised Monegasque companies. This will be undertaken in conjunction with the Department of External Relations and Cooperation.

“The development of the space sector in the Principality of Monaco reinforces the attractiveness of our Sovereign State in a new area,” said Frédéric Genta, Interministerial Delegate in Charge of Digital Transition. “With the creation of this entity, we will be called upon to participate in discussions on the subject alongside global and emerging space powers.”

Private aerospace, once the sole domain of public institutions, is increasingly going private. This booming industry is creating a world where there is a better understanding of climatic occurrences and Earth observation as well as closing the digital divide giving once remote places access to internet and WiFi.

The Space Affairs Office is expected to hold a meeting of the stakeholders in mid-October to define an action plan that meets their expectations.

For more information on the office, contact them directly at bas@gouv.mc.

 

Understanding Monaco’s land reclamation efforts

A new exhibition entitled Extensions at Sea in Monaco attempts to explain how and why the Principality has expanded its territory through sheer force of will, carving out land where only sea once existed.

The Principality of Monaco was always going to find space an issue. With a total area of 1.5km2, the country first grew upward, then, at the end of the 1950s, plans began emerging for it to grow outward.

An ambitious proposal by Prince Rainier II, the “Builder Prince”, was formed to expand the Principality from 1.5km2 to 2.1km2 in a quite audacious way. The Prince wanted to grow his country by reclaiming land from the sea.

Now, an exhibition documenting this colossal undertaking, on the eve of completing a second territorial expansion, has opened. Called ‘Extensions at Sea in Monaco’, and put on by the Department of Cultural Affairs, the photography exhibition shows to what extent this conquest of land from the water was a “geopolitical, social, urbanistic, technical, ecological and human epic”.

“The first significant space gains were made first on land with the burial of the railway lines which then crossed the country. But the most extraordinary land conquests will be at sea,” says the exhibition curator, Björn Dahlström. “To do this, the Prince surrounded himself with daring teams that he consulted over the decades, in a free and ambitious, even futuristic approach, in line with the ambient optimism and modernism of the post-war period.”

Monaco land extension, photo source Department of Cultural Affairs

Much of the land we take for granted today was once coastline. Larvotto in the Portier area and the median hosting the Summer Sporting in the east, and the creation of the Fontvieille median in the west were all part of this initial land reclamation project.

The Portier-Larvotto section was first, spanning from 1954 to 1961 creating new terrain then artificial beach. Starting in 1965, the bay in Fontvieille was drained and dried, creating land and a new protected marina. This project lasted until 1971. 

“Monaco then experienced a territorial revolution. All these projects permanently changed the physiognomy of the Principality by increasing the territory from 150 to 202 hectares,” adds Björn Dahlström. “These extensions allowed the development of the country, but above all gave it the attributes of a truly modern nation finally made possible thanks to these spaces, and the creation of new housing of course, but also and above all, new services and industries.” 

Another expansion in the Portier district is currently being carried out by Prince Albert II, which will see another 0.06km2 added to the country’s size with a delivery date in 2025.

The exhibit will run from 15th October 2021 to 2nd January 2022 in the Exhibition Room at Quai Antoine 1er.

 
 
Photo source: Department Cultural Affairs
 
 

Monaco charity race attracting top cycling stars

A plethora of World Tour cyclists have been enlisted to take part in a new charity cycling event, called Monaco BeKing, taking place next month in support of the Michele Scarponi Onlus Foundation and the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation.
Touted as “a show dedicated to sports enthusiasts, bike lovers and especially families and children: a unique sporting event, which aims to involve the local community with a dynamic and fun-filled program of activities”, the event on 28th November aims to be a day filled not only with sport, but also awareness on issues such as soft mobility and road safety.
Pro cycling stars Matteo Trentin and Claudia Morandini have teamed up with AWE Sports to create this event with the proceeds going to the Michele Scarponi Onlus Foundation and the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation.
In addition to the husband-and-wife Trentin-Morandini team, well- known riders such as Sonny Colbrelli, Elia Viviani, Tadej Pogačar, Primož Roglič, Philippe Gilbert, Tim Wellens, Michael Valgren, Elena Cecchini, Luke Rowe, Matej Mohorič, Lizzie Deignan, and Pater Sagan, the Ambassador of the Princess Charlene Foundation, are set to join in.
Along with the criterium race, there will be a closed road circuit with a Pre/Am race and a chance for the public to join in and ride the route with the stars. There will also be educational road safety events for kids and families and an auction made up of donations from the pro riders and the organisation.
The event will feature a Pro-Am charity race in the morning where a pro will be paired up with an ambassador from the Princess Charlene Foundation and two members of the public. The cost of the spots is €3,000 and the event will see 15 teams in all taking part.
The criterium will be followed by road safety education talks and time to remember road racer Michele Scarponi, who was killed in a training accident near his home in Italy in 2017.
Monaco is home to a host of professional cyclists, over 40 at last count, who take advantage of the varied terrain and mild weather, making it an ideal training spot year-round.
“There are a lot of good riders living in Monaco and during the pandemic, my wife and I came up with this idea. We wanted to do a race that related to the fans and gave something back,” Trentin told Cyclingnews.com.
“Whoever you are, we want you to come to the event, bring your bike, and have a good time. The roads for the circuit will be closed from 9am to 5pm. There will be no traffic and riding on the circuit is for everyone. We want to then teach the kids about safety and biking in the real world. A lot of kids aren’t prepared so we want to help them and their families.”
For more information, visit the Monaco BeKing website at https://www.bekingevents.com/
 
 
 

Principality Prize 2021 winner announced

Julia Kristeva has been awarded the Principality Prize 2021 jointly by the Philosophical Meetings of Monaco and the Prince Pierre of Monaco Foundation during a ceremony on Tuesday.
Julia Kristeva, born in Bulgaria, has worked and lives in France since 1966. She is a writer, psychoanalyst, professor emeritus at the University of Paris VII – Diderot and full member of the Psychoanalytic Society of Paris. Among her long list of achievements, she has been awarded Doctor Honoris Causa by many universities in the United States, Canada and Europe where she teaches regularly. Commander of the Legion of Honor (2015), Commander of the Order of Merit (2011), first laureate in December 2004 of the Holberg Prize (created by the Government of Norway to remedy the absence of the human sciences in the Nobel list), she won the Hannah Arendt Prize in December 2006 and the Vaclav Havel Prize in 2008. She is the author of some 30 books, including The Revolution of Poetic Language, Stories of Love, Powers of horror (essay on abjection), Black Sun (depression and melancholy), Sensitive Time (Proust and the literary experience), the trilogy The feminine genius: Hannah Arendt, Mélanie Klein and Colette, La Haine et le Pardon, This incredible need to believe, Pulsions of time, Marriage considered one of the fine arts (with Philippe Sollers), as well as novels including Les Samouraïs, Meurtre à Byzance, Thérèse mon amour, L’Horloge enchantée. Her work is fully translated into English, and most of her books are available in the major languages ​​of the world.
The Prince Pierre Foundation and the Founding Members of the Philosophical Meetings jointly undertake to award the Principality Prize each year to an author for all of their philosophical work.
A life of writing in philosophy is therefore honoured, a singular work which has opened up new avenues in the field of philosophy and initiated different approaches to science, politics, theology, history, anthropology, ethics or psychoanalysis.
The laureate of the Principality Prize is invited to give a conference the following year during the awarding of the Prize.
 
 
 Photo by John Foley – Opale