viking yacht plant

About Viking Yachts

Building a better boat every day is the mantra of the viking yacht company.

Viking prides itself on its renowned manufacturing capabilities. From the initial design to the finished product, Viking’s highly-regarded reputation is rooted in the company’s commitment to produce 90 percent of the boat in house.

Except for components such as engines, transmissions, pumps, hoses, air conditioning units, electronics and entertainment systems, virtually everything else is produced in house by our talented workforce.

The Viking Yacht Company has celebrated over five decades in business building luxury performance sportfishing and cruising yachts. Started by brothers Bob and Bill Healey in 1964 when they bought Peterson-Viking Builders, a small, struggling New Jersey builder of 37-foot, wooden sportfishing boats, Viking Yachts has grown to become a world leader in semi-custom fiberglass yacht production with over 5,000 Vikings delivered.

 

Viking prides itself on its renowned manufacturing capabilities. From the initial design to the finished product, Viking’s highly regarded reputation is rooted in the company’s commitment to produce 90 percent of the boat in-house. Except for components such as engines, transmissions, air conditioning units and electronics, virtually everything else is produced in-house by our talented workforce.

 

We encourage you to continue visiting our website for information and updates pertaining to new models, company awards, plant expansion projects and other Viking developments.

 

Looking for information and specifications on Vikings no longer in production? Visit our brochure library of select classic Vikings, which are available for download.

 

View the latest photos about Viking Yachts.

 

viking yacht plant

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The Difference Main Image

 
Experience and Pride

The same company qualities that make Viking the No. 1 boatbuilder in the world and define “The Viking Difference” also apply to our new sister company, Valhalla Boatworks. The Valhalla Difference means V Series owners get the same innovation, engineering, performance and quality that you’ve come to expect from Viking. VBW utilizes the same strong domestic and international dealer network as Viking, and also has two additional dealerships in New Jersey and Florida – Valhalla Boat Sales North in New Gretna and Point Pleasant, New Jersey, and Valhalla Boat Sales South in Riviera Beach. The same renowned customer service resources that have set Viking apart from its competitors for decades are available to V Series owners. Valhalla Boatworks is an extension of the Viking Yacht Company, a true commitment to bringing more Viking enthusiasts into our family of happy owners.

 
Family Business

Brothers Bill and Bob Healey founded the Viking Yacht Company in 1964 and it remains family owned and operated. Bill’s son, Patrick J. Healey, is the CEO and President of the Viking Yacht Company. Robert Healey Jr., who is Bob’s son, is the Executive Co-Chairman of the Viking Group. Viking Yachts answers only to its unyielding commitment to build the finest boats money can buy. The third generation of the Healey family – Pat's sons Sean and Justin and daughter Kaitlyn – are now fully involved with Viking and Valhalla and will remain key contributors in the business for years to come.

 
State-of-the-Art-Facility

The Viking plants in New Gretna and Mullica represent the pinnacle of boat manufacturing achievement, with nine modern buildings, state-of-the-art machinery and the space to build over 30 models from 33 to 93 feet. Valhalla Boatworks has a dedicated facility – Viking Mullica – with separate production lines for each model; this manufacturing operation will soon be expanding with an additional 7,500 square feet of production space. VBW utilizes the same CNC routers and five-axis profilers to develop complex parts. With a dedicated, talented and skilled workforce, the human element is equally dynamic. Our key personnel in manufacturing, design and engineering, sales and human resources have been working together for decades.

 
In-House Manufacturing

The majority of every Valhalla is designed and manufactured in-house, resulting in the production of the world's finest high-performance center console yachts. Whether it is an engineered Seakeeper installation, a wiring harness labeled every eight inches or a resin-infused structural stringer grid, you can be sure of incomparable quality.

 
Front and Center

An engineering-driven company, Viking thrives on the pulse of innovation and the development of new and exciting product. We have the youngest fleet in the marine industry that consists of ground-breaking boats. In fact, our passion for boatbuilding led to the development of Valhalla Boatworks at our Mullica facility.

 
Quality Control

We hold an inherent quality-control advantage because the company manufactures most of the yacht’s components in-house. In addition, dedicated personnel thoroughly inspect each Viking and Valhalla yacht during the build process. This type of attention to detail ensures greater reliability, safety and customer satisfaction.

 
Finest Service

Experienced service personnel with an intimate knowledge of on-board systems stand behind every Viking and Valhalla Yacht. You never go to sea alone when you own a Viking or Valhalla.

 
Viking Yacht Service Center

In addition to the Viking Customer Service Department and Viking Yachting Center in New Gretna, we operate the Viking Yacht Service Center on the Intracoastal Waterway in Riviera Beach, Florida. It’s just minutes from Palm Beach Inlet; our two service complexes handle warranty, fiberglass and running gear repairs. Staffed by Viking-trained professionals, Viking is the only manufacturer to provide its owners with a satellite facility solely for their convenience.

 
Vertical Integration

To complement the Viking and Valhalla experience, we have two sister companies. Palm Beach Towers designs and crafts the finest aluminum tuna towers, custom railings, fiberglass hardtops, drop-down electronic boxes, flush-mounted electric teaser reels and a host of other specialized items. Atlantic Marine Electronics is the premier source for Viking installed navigation, communication and entertainment equipment. Valhalla Boatworks will be utilizing PBT for the V-41 gap towers, and custom electronics installations can be done by Atlantic Marine Electronics.

 
Lead not Follow

In the marine industry, we don’t just raise the bar. We are the bar. Viking and Valhalla incorporate the best in design and performance to manufacture the finest semi-custom yachts in the world. From technical advancements like virtual tank testing and designer touches like curved doorways and exquisite joinery, our yachts are the epitome of luxury and seagoing excellence. Come visit our family of boatbuilders and discover the Viking/Valhalla Difference.

 
V-28 V-29 V-33 V-37 V-41 V-46 V-55
 
     
   
     
  Copyright © 2023 Valhalla Boatworks All Rights Reserved.  
     
   
     
  A proud member of the Viking family!  
   
     
   
   
     
 

The right is reserved to make changes, without notice, at any time, in equipment, materials,

prices and specifications. Accommodation drawings and photos may show optional equipment.

Performance may vary depending upon conditions.

 
     
     
     

Meet Pat Healey

  • By Peter Frederiksen
  • Updated: March 9, 2018

Q&A With Pat Healey

A second-generation boatbuilder, Pat Healey heads up Viking Yacht Co. as its president and CEO. The company is family owned and operated, with plants spanning some 800,000 square feet on the banks of the Bass River in New Gretna, New Jersey, and on the Mullica River, a short ride from the bright lights of Atlantic City. In its last fiscal year alone, Viking built 79 sport-fishing boats, from 37 to 93 feet, and it’s on track to continue its tremendous success in 2018 and beyond.

What were your first jobs when your father, Bill, and uncle Bob Healey started Viking Yachts in 1964? Viking was building wooden boats back then. I was probably 10 years old and would come to the factory with my father on Saturdays. My first job was in the green oil department: The insides of the hulls needed multiple coats of green wood preservative, so I used a big paint brush on a long stick and slopped the thin oil everywhere so it would be absorbed into the grain of the wood. I plugged the teak decks and was taught that each plug needed to have the grain going in the right direction, and I also packed oakum yarn between the hull planks with a putty knife.

Did you know right away boatbuilding would be your career? Pretty much. And any time I complained about how hard the work was, my father told me a thousand times that growing up in a boatyard was better than being on an iron pile, which is how he and my uncle Jerry grew up. When I bitched, my father would ask, “So, you want to go to the iron pile? Come on, I’ll take you to Uncle Jerry.”

Which departments have you worked in? During high school and college, I worked throughout the summer months and part time when I could, and I worked in all aspects of boatbuilding. I spent 10 years full time in production, and enjoyed the fiberglass work because I was a surfer and fixing surfboards was a given in my early teen years. But I also fixed up old boats — Wellcrafts and other rehabs. I wanted to learn how to do all this, and I enjoyed it. I spent a lot of time in mechanical setups and basically went through the whole company. Eventually, Rudy Dalinger put me in charge of the trim section and I worked there for about three years. I became a service supervisor and finally went into sales.

Q&A With Pat Healey

How did Hatteras and Bertram influence Viking designs? My father would wake me up before the crack of dawn when we were at the boat shows in New York, Fort Lauderdale and Miami, and we would study the Hatteras and Bertram displays. They had a lot of great ideas, and each time we came away with improvements. We always built a great boat, from the early 1970s, but our boats had what I call a Jersey style, while the others had their North Carolina and South Florida looks. They had that panache. So we set out to change the style, and it began appearing in our 35-, 41- and 46-foot convertibles. We could sell boat for boat with Hatteras and Bertram in the Northeast, but they would kick our ass everywhere else.

What is the driving force at Viking? To build a better boat every day, a mantra my father came up with a long time ago. We strive to out-design, out-build and out-service everyone. In 1995, I was the vice president of sales overseeing marketing, sales and service. My father and I were butting heads on design. I wanted to incorporate the ideas of the younger members of our team. We were hardcore fishermen. So in 1996, my father gave us a shot with Bruce Wilson and his son David, Drew McDowell, Lonni Rutt and me. We reviewed the custom boatbuilding world and took those great features that were focused on chasing billfish around the world and incorporated those into the Viking 55 Convertible. In the fall of 1997, we launched our first 55. By the time the boat appeared at the Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show, we had sold the first 20 hulls. It became one of the most successful boats in our history and accomplished an equally important mission of delivering the boats on time, which to this day remains a company benchmark.

Q&A With Pat Healey

How do you stay in touch with your customers? We are all eyes and ears at fishing tournaments and boat shows. We are still learning every day. If we can tweak something to make it better, we do. It could be changing the layout of the mezzanine or tackle center, fine-tuning the livewell so you don’t lose bait, or tweaking the props. We stay on top of everything we build.

So rather than chase success, you make it happen. To be successful, you surround yourself with the right people. That box is checked: We have the best. You need to stay current on available materials and methods used to build the boats to make them stronger, lighter, more fuel efficient and faster with available horsepower. It’s important to be on the leading edge, whether it’s in fiberglass, resins, generator technology, steering or electrical systems. It’s important to build boats that are Seakeeper ready, which we have done for the past 10 years. Knowing the next big item in the industry helps us build that better boat. We spend $12 million a year in our research and development, and that is a critical investment over the long haul.

How has the Viking acquisition of the former Ocean Yachts plant played out? Ocean’s John Leek III wanted to retire, and he approached me about acquiring his 100,000-square-foot facility, which is only 9 miles from New Gretna, and I didn’t think twice. But I wanted two things in addition to the plant: the 37 Billfish, because it was a nice design although it never had a real chance to be successful because of the timing of its introduction in 2008. I also wanted John Leek IV to come work for Viking because he is an outstanding boatbuilder. In our first full year, we built 35 Vikings in that facility, from 37 to 52 feet. The plant, which we call Viking Mullica, allows us to free up space on our four production lines in New Gretna for our larger convertibles as well as our line of motoryachts.

Q&A With Pat Healey

What does Viking have in store for the 2018 model year? The 68 Convertible premiered at our VIP Preview and then again at the Miami International Boat Show. We also have a new 44 Open and Convertible, as well as a 68-foot Enclosed Bridge on the way.

Who do you admire in the industry? I look up to the boat­builders. They know who they are because I shake their hand and give them a hug and say there are not many of us left. That’s who I admire. We need more boatbuilders to keep this industry going.

Read Next: Viking 92 – Boat Review

What is your favorite type of fishing? My favorite is billfishing, but right behind it is striper and flounder fishing. I just enjoy a bent rod. The reason I enjoy billfish so much is the interaction with all the other teams on the dock. There is nothing like it: the camaraderie, having a beer on the dock box in the afternoon, eating a slice of pizza in the cockpit, rigging baits till midnight, working on the boat. All the challenges that go along with tournament and fun fishing are just awesome. I have the same passion for stripers and flounder, but there’s more at stake when you’re billfishing. It’s a bigger rush.

  • More: Sport Fishing Boats , Viking Yachts

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IMAGES

  1. Lines of Pedigree for a Longtime Viking Yachts Owner

    viking yacht plant

  2. Tested: Viking 58 Convertible

    viking yacht plant

  3. Viking Yacht Company Plant Tour

    viking yacht plant

  4. Is Viking A Good Yacht?

    viking yacht plant

  5. Happy Birthday Viking

    viking yacht plant

  6. Why Purchase a Viking Yacht?

    viking yacht plant

COMMENTS

  1. Viking Yachts - Commitment to Excellence

    From 37-foot wooden cruising and fishing boats to the ground-breaking 55 Convertible to the 38-knot resin-infused 90 Sky Bridge, Viking has become the world leader in semi-custom fiberglass yacht production.

  2. Viking Yachts History

    Started by brothers Bob and Bill Healey in 1964 when they bought Peterson-Viking Builders, a small, struggling New Jersey builder of 37-foot, wooden sportfishing boats, Viking Yachts has grown to become a world leader in semi-custom fiberglass yacht production with over 5,000 Vikings delivered.

  3. About Viking Yachts

    Started by brothers Bob and Bill Healey in 1964 when they bought Peterson-Viking Builders, a small, struggling New Jersey builder of 37-foot, wooden sportfishing boats, Viking Yachts has grown to become a world leader in semi-custom fiberglass yacht production with over 5,000 Vikings delivered.

  4. Viking Yacht Company Celebrates 60 Years of Boatbuilding

    On April 1, 2024, the Viking Yacht Company will celebrate its 60th year in boatbuilding. From humble beginnings on the banks of the Bass River in New Gretna, New Jersey, Viking has become the largest manufacturer of luxury fiberglass sport-fishing yachts in the world, with more than 5,500 boats delivered.

  5. An In-Depth Look At The Viking Factory And How The Yachts Are ...

    Purchasing and owning a Viking Yacht is an experience like nothing else on earth and neither is visiting the acclaimed Viking factory. Take a brief video tour of the New Jersey factory and...

  6. Viking Yacht Company Plant Tour - YouTube

    Experience the Viking difference as this plant tour explores every aspect from concept to completion. Touring through the Viking yacht plant has been described as Disneyland for adults....

  7. Factory Fridays: Inside Viking Yachts Manufacturing Process ...

    Since Bill and Bob Healy acquired a wooden boat factory in 1964, Viking has expanded its holdings and now encompasses Viking Yachts, Valhalla, Palm Beach Towers, and Atlantic Marine Electronics. The manufacturing tour showcases the yacht-making process, beginning with the fiberglass hull and molds.

  8. History of Viking Yachts: 60 Years of Boatbuilding Excellence

    Explore the rich history & legacy of Viking Yachts, a renowned manufacturer of top-quality sportfish yachts ranging from 38 to 90 feet

  9. Valhalla Boatworks - The Difference

    The Viking plants in New Gretna and Mullica represent the pinnacle of boat manufacturing achievement, with nine modern buildings, state-of-the-art machinery and the space to build over 30 models from 33 to 93 feet.

  10. Interview with Viking Yachts' Pat Healey | Marlin

    A second-generation boatbuilder, Pat Healey heads up Viking Yacht Co. as its president and CEO. The company is family owned and operated, with plants spanning some 800,000 square feet on the banks of the Bass River in New Gretna, New Jersey, and on the Mullica River, a short ride from the bright lights of Atlantic City.