When I visited Mi Sueño in June, I was impressed with the aesthetic solutions that Trinity Yachts and Patrick Knowles Designs came up with for the technical challenges on the aft deck and for the saloon entry. The alfresco seating area on the aft deck is raised and centered, providing better views of an anchorage while simultaneously ensuring there’s enough room below decks for the tender-launching system. And the nearly 500-bottle wine-tasting area just inside the aft-deck doors is a spot I can easily imagine getting more use than the skylounge, as it’s a truly inviting room unto itself. You’d never know that the floor-to-ceiling wine cabinets (with humidors below) flanking each side conceal the air trunks from the engine room.
These are just two of the ways that you should expect the unexpected aboard Mi Sueño.

Further proof: a wheelchair-friendly elevator and wheelchair-friendly stateroom. Among the five guest cabins below decks (a gym/massage room on the bridge deck can convert to an extra stateroom if needed), one positions the bed slightly farther to one side of the room, leaving the opposite side plenty open for a chair to pull right up. The accompanying head includes a seat in the shower and handrails, too. Even those of us so-called able-bodied people might find those features helpful.
Yet another example, and something I think will be particularly appreciated by charter guests, is the emphasis on extra fun on the sundeck. Sure, there’s a bar and a hot tub, but there’s also a dip pool just forward of and adjacent to the hot tub. And the bar is adjacent to the hot tub, so no one need reach more than arm’s length for a cool beverage.













Here’s a look at all of those areas, plus more of Mi Sueño, the first launch in Trinity Yachts’ new 33-foot-beam series.
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