AISEE is a project developed by an international team of recent graduates from the Master’s program in Yacht Design at the Politecnico di Milano. The team consists of Oliver Acosta (France), product designer; Arturo Carbajal Álvarez (Mexico), architect; Servet Altas (Turkey), naval architect; Sofía Molina Stornelli (Colombia), architect; and Allegra Mauri (Italy), interior designer.
The project was developed as the program’s final thesis and consisted of creating a complete yacht concept, taking an integrated approach to exterior design, interior architecture, and naval architecture. The work was structured around each member’s area of expertise, allowing the different aspects of the project to progress in parallel through constant reviews to ensure consistency between the aesthetic vision, spatial organization, and technical requirements.

Arturo Carbajal led the yacht’s exterior design and coordinated the overall development of the interior spaces, while also contributing to the production of the renderings and the final presentation video. Oliver Acosta was responsible for developing the project’s visual representation, collaborating on the creation of the renderings and the main presentation images. Servet Altas was responsible for the naval architecture, including technical calculations and the evaluation of the project’s feasibility. Sofía Molina Stornelli was the lead designer for the yacht’s interiors, working on the conception and organization of the interior spaces. Allegra Mauri supported the interior design, particularly in the selection of materials and finishes.

AISEE is a 44-meter motor yacht designed with a waterline length of 42 meters, a maximum beam of 8.5 meters, and a draft of 2.05 meters. The project has a gross tonnage of 406 GT, a cruising speed of 12.4 knots, and a maximum speed of 15.2 knots. The concept was developed as a comprehensive yacht design exercise, in which naval architecture, exterior design, interior architecture, and visualization were coordinated to create a coherent proposal from both technical and spatial perspectives, exploring the balance between private spaces and social areas on board.
