
#ROGER PENSKE YACHT PLUS#
Now, the Terence Disdale-designed interiors include an owner’s full-beam stateroom, plus 10 other staterooms that all together will accommodate 19 guests whose every need are attended to by a crew of 31.

Tatoosh was initially put up for sale not long after Allen’s death, but was taken off the market for a refitting. The sale price of a yacht can be a fiercely closely guarded secret, but if that $100 million figure is accurate, then the Microsoft mogul’s estate, valued at about $20 billion at the time of this death, is headed for a hefty, albeit easily affordable loss.

Originally built in 2000 by German shipyard Nobiskrug for telecommunications executive Craig McCaw, Allen purchased the vessel the following year for an estimated $100 million. The name ‘Tatoosh” means “breast” in the Chinook Jargon, in reference to the two large rock outcrops on the south face of Arizona’s Butter Peak - make of that what you will! - and the Tatoosh Range was used historically by the Taidnapam indigenous people. Tatoosh is available via both Fraser Yacht Brokers and Burgess. Amazingly, Tatoosh currently ranks as just the 60th largest yacht in the world, while Octopus ranks 20th. Remarkably, and though it stretches 303 feet long, Tatoosh was Allen’s “spare” superyacht his other boat, Octopus, which sold last year to Swedish pharma billionaire Roger Samuelsson after it was listed at $325 million, is 414 feet long.

The tub in question is Tatoosh, which belonged to late Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, who died in 2018. If you happen to have $90 million to splash around on a superyacht, there will be a pretty nice boat for you at the Monaco Yacht Show later this month.
