Red or dead

12 min read

When Richard Churchill decided to bring an old Sunseeker Superhawk 34 back to life, he wanted it to look and feel like a brand new boat, including the colour scheme!

Richard at the helm of his restored and heavily modified Sunseeker Superhawk 34, named RED after his personal motto ‘Realise Every Dream’

PHOTOS: Tye Kellett
How it looked before the refit started

Boats have always been in my blood. I grew up in Dartmouth where the river was my playground. I B started sailing dinghies aged 10 but my fascination with motor boats started when my dad bought the former Admiral’s launch from the Dartmouth Naval College. This handsome 22ft clinker-built wooden launch had clearly seen better days, so my dad set about restoring it to its former glory. It was a great lesson in what you could achieve by refitting an older boat, but my head was already being turned by the shiny new gin palaces that were starting to appear on the river. I loved the sleek styling and performance of these modern sportscruisers. For me it was all about power and speed, an addiction that has stayed with me for life, so it’s no surprise that as a teenager I also got heavily into racing motocross bikes.

To help fund my new hobby, as soon as I left school I started working for Peter Kidd, building bespoke power boats for the military. When Charlie Chivers asked Peter to help set up Ribeye Boats in 1998, I became their first employee. It was still a young company back then and I was involved in every aspect of the process, from laying up the hulls to fitting the engines and rigging the wiring. I even had the chance to test and deliver the boats. It was a great place to work and the perfect way to learn many of the skills I still use today. However, when I was offered the opportunity to move to Menorca and work for the Sealine charter school, training customers and looking after the boats, I couldn’t resist the lure of a life overseas.

It was a fabulous few years but after a while I started to miss the UK and my racing so I wrote to Princess and Sunseeker asking for a job. Remarkably, David King, the founder and CEO of Princess Yachts passed my CV on to their distributor, Princess Motor Yacht Sales, where for the next four years I worked as their warranty engineer, as well as helping out at their Boat Show stands. It was while working at the London Boat Show in 2000 that I first saw a Sunseeker Superhawk 34 in the flesh. It had recently featured in the Bond movie The World is Not Enough and the instant I saw it, I was smitten. Ever since then, it has always been a dream of mine to own one, but at the time it was well beyond my means.

The hull was in decent condition when he bought it but the rest was looking very tired.
As well as replacing the upholstery and helm console, Richard decided to add a T-Top.
He used a plywood

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