Carinthia VII's interiors by the late Alberto Pinto are among the most celebrated in yachting history. A tribute to timeless design.
Alberto Pinto was, by any measure, one of the greatest interior designers of the twentieth century. His work spanned palaces, private jets, hotels, and superyachts — and among his finest marine projects is Carinthia VII, the 97-metre Lurssen that he dressed in a style best described as aristocratic European grandeur. Pinto passed away in 2012, making his interiors aboard Carinthia VII not merely beautiful but historically significant — a time capsule of a design vision that cannot be replicated.
Walking Through the Interiors
To step aboard Carinthia VII is to enter a world of rich fabrics, museum-quality art, warm timbers, and the kind of detail that reveals itself slowly — a hand-painted ceiling here, a piece of rare marble there, a light fitting sourced from a Venetian glassmaker whose family has been working the craft for centuries. The effect is cumulative and profound: by the end of a week aboard, you feel as though you have been living in a European palace that happens to move.
“Pinto's interiors are not decorative. They are architectural. They change the way you feel in a space. Carinthia VII is his marine masterpiece.”
Available from €1,400,000 per week, Carinthia VII cruises the Mediterranean and Caribbean. Her Tim Heywood exterior — with that distinctive dark hull — remains one of the most recognisable silhouettes in any harbour.




