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Lagoon catamaran is a brand of twin-hulled boats that are designed and produced in Bordeaux, France. The company began in 1984 as a specialist multihull division of Jeanneau , a volume monohull constructor.
The Lagoon 440 is a recreational catamaran, built predominantly of polyester fiberglass, with wood trim.The fiberglass is all vacuum-bagged infused resin. The hull is solid fiberglass below the waterline and closed-cell foam-cored above it, while the deck is balsa-cored.
In a 2005 Sail Magazine review noted, "following up on their successful Lagoon 440 catamaran, the Peteghem-Prevost design team has created a 51-footer that will be available with several options—an owner's version with a three- or a four-cabin arrangement and a charter version with four or five cabins." [11]
The design was built by Lagoon catamaran, a division of Jeanneau, in France. It was also built by TPI Composites in the United States. Lagoon catamaran later became part of Construction Navale Bordeaux (CNB) and Groupe Beneteau. The boat was produced from 1990 to 1994, with 51 boats built, but it is now out of production. [1] [2] [8] [9] [10]
The Lagoon 46 is a French sailboat that was designed by Van Peteghem/Lauriot-Prevost with the exterior design by Patrick le Quément and interior design by Nauta Design. It was intended as a cruiser , as well as for employment in the yacht charter industry and first built in 2019.
The Lagoon 65, marketed as the Lagoon Sixty 5, is a French sailboat that was designed by Van Peteghem/Lauriot-Prevost with the exterior design by Patrick le Quément and interior design by Nauta Design. It was intended as a cruiser for private ownership and also for the yacht charter role, and first built in 2019. [1] [2] [3]
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In a review, katamarans.com reported, "the 400 is one of Lagoon's 3rd generation designs that evolved from their classic 410. Although Lagoon veered to more comfort over performance in this generation, the 400 is still a competent sailor in a breeze, but she's no lightweight and struggles in lighter airs (under 10 knots) unless you have the bowsprit to fly the larger sails (gennaker, code 0 ...