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Riva 112' Dolcevita Super — Widget 1 — USA Onboard
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Riva · 112' Dolcevita Super

A Bigger
Dolcevita

A 34-meter flybridge that stretches the most admired profile in the Riva catalog and rewrites the aft deck around the waterline — the most consequential refinement the Dolcevita line has produced since its 2018 debut.

USA Onboard Editorial · Feature · 2025 · Reading · 11 min

Some yachts arrive with a thesis. The first Riva 112' Dolcevita Super, launched in La Spezia in July and unveiled at the 2025 Cannes Yachting Festival, arrives with a refinement — the kind a shipyard only attempts once it knows precisely what its audience came for.

The 112' is the successor to the Riva 110' Dolcevita, a 34-meter flybridge that, since 2018, has quietly become one of the most quoted shapes on the Mediterranean. The new model keeps the silhouette and pushes against everything else. Length grows to 34.37 meters, beam holds at 7.27 meters, and the aft deck is reorganized around a 35-square-meter beach club that sits a few inches above the surface of the water. Riva calls the exercise a radical restyling. The phrase reads stronger in marketing than it does on board: what has actually changed is the geometry of how the yacht meets the sea.

Officina Italiana Design — the studio that has drawn every Riva since 1994, founded by Mauro Micheli and Sergio Beretta — worked the project with the Ferretti Group Engineering Department and the Strategic Product Committee chaired by Piero Ferrari. The collaboration was renewed earlier this year and now runs through 2030. That continuity matters here. The 112' is not a reinvention. It is the most disciplined application of a vocabulary the studio has spent three decades sharpening.

It also enters the world with a confidence built into the spec sheet. The first hull was awarded Best Exterior Design (30–50m) at the 2025 World Yachts Trophies before most owners had seen it in person. The award is less interesting than the consensus behind it: that in a segment crowded with novelty, Riva has produced a refinement worth pausing over.

A first look

The 112', read across every deck

34.37m
Length Overall
112 ft 9 in
7.27m
Maximum beam
23 ft 10 in
25.5kn
Top speed
2× MTU 16V 2000 M96L
35
Beach club
Plus folding side terraces
Riva 112' Dolcevita Super — Widget 2 — USA Onboard
Architecture · Beach Club

The stern, rewritten at the waterline

If there is a single argument this yacht is built to make, it is the one written into the back of the hull. The beach club spans thirty-five square meters of platform that sits dramatically close to the surface — almost flush — and opens further with two large bulwarks that swing outward on hinges to form side terraces. The result is a sea-level living room with the geometry of a small private dock and the proportions of a Mediterranean villa terrace.

Behind the platform's central sunpad, a ventilated locker holds two SeaBobs, ready to slide out without disturbing anyone resting on the cushions above. Beneath the sunpad, a full garage accommodates a tender and a jet ski. None of this is theatrical engineering for its own sake; it is the kind of choreography that distinguishes a yacht built around an aft deck from one that merely has one. The 110' Dolcevita carried a single fold-down platform. The 112' adds the two side balconies and lowers the floor by a meaningful margin. The water is no longer somewhere you go to. It is where the day already lives.

An architectural note
The 112' Dolcevita Super retains the 110's signature profile and 7.27-meter beam, but the hull has been extended and the aft section reshaped. Officina Italiana Design worked the stern as a separate problem from the rest of the boat — a discipline visible in how naturally the beach club, the cockpit and the foredeck now relate as a single sequence of outdoor rooms, rather than as the residual space of a flybridge yacht.
Aerial · Aft deck sequence
Upper deck · Flybridge

A third living room, redrawn from scratch

The flybridge is the gesture where Officina Italiana Design has been most explicit about replacing built-in cabinetry with freestanding furniture. At sixty square meters, the upper deck reads less as a helm-station-with-bench-seating and more as an open-air apartment. A cocktail bar runs through the middle of the layout, with stools facing a hi-lo television that rises and disappears on demand. Opposite, a deep sofa lounge anchors what is, in practice, the social heart of the yacht at anchor.

The cockpit below adopts the same instinct. Twenty-four square meters of aft terrace, two large sofas, freestanding pieces rather than fixed banquettes, and a built-in unit configured to the owner's preferences. Forward, an enlarged sunpad and seating area can be specified with a foredeck jacuzzi — the configuration chosen on hull number one. Read together, the three exterior decks operate as a vertical sequence of social spaces, each with a distinct light, a distinct breeze, and a distinct relationship to the horizon.

Exterior · Three altitudes

The same yacht, observed from three different decks

Riva 112 foredeck jacuzzi configuration Foredeck · Jacuzzi
Riva 112 flybridge aft lounge with freestanding furniture Flybridge · Aft lounge
Riva 112 aft solarium and beach club Aft solarium · Sea-level

A Dolcevita design expresses a deep rapport with the sea. On the 112', that connection becomes its argument.

USA Onboard · After Mauro Micheli & Sergio Beretta, Officina Italiana Design
Riva 112' Dolcevita Super — Widget 3 — USA Onboard
Riva 112 main saloon with rosewood and black leather detailing Main saloon · Hull #1 layout
Main deck · Interior

Fifty square meters, two different rooms

Riva offers the 112's main saloon in two layouts, and the choice is consequential. The conventional configuration places the lounge area aft, on entry, with the dining table in the center — the formula familiar from the smaller 102' Corsaro Super. Hull number one inverts the order: dining aft, lounge midships. The owner's instinct here is worth noting. Placing dinner on the threshold of the cockpit, with the saloon's sliding port doors open, turns the meal into a partly outdoor event. Placing the lounge amidships, anchored by three Poltrona Frau sofas around a Poliform low table, gives the social heart of the boat a place to breathe.

The dining setup on hull one centers on an Acerbis Int table with a stainless-steel base and a glass top, surrounded by ten leather-upholstered MDF Italia chairs. The galley sits, in another quiet break with convention, on the starboard side. Throughout, the dominant timber is high-gloss rosewood, set against decorative inserts of black hammered leather in the saloon and in the master cabin detailing. Light carpets and pale ceilings keep the wood from closing in. The room reads at over fifty square meters, with a ceiling height above two meters everywhere — and reaching 2.25 meters at the highest point — proportions more typical of yachts a full size class larger.

Riva 112 master suite forward on main deck Master suite
Riva 112 master bathroom with twin basins Master bath
Forward · Owner's level

The bow as the owner's terrace

The master suite occupies thirty-four square meters at the forward end of the main deck — a layout that places the owner at the front of the yacht and at the level of the helm, rather than below it. A new walk-in wardrobe articulates the entry, two large closets line the cabin, and a vanity desk faces hull-side glazing significantly larger than on the 110'. The bathroom carries twin basins and the same rosewood-and-leather discipline as the rest of the interior.

Below, the lower deck is structured entirely around guests and crew. Four cabins handle accommodation — two full VIPs and two doubles, each with an en-suite — and acoustic comfort has been engineered into the bulkhead rather than added on later. A reinforced partition separates the crew quarters from the guest cabins, and the flooring has been redesigned to attenuate slamming and vibration at sea. None of this shows in photographs. All of it shows in how the yacht feels under way.

Underway · Full speed
Engineering · Under the hull

A planing hull that earns its twenty-five knots

The standard package pairs two MTU 16V 2000 M96L engines, each rated 2,638 horsepower, for a top speed of 25.5 knots and a cruising speed near 23. An optional spec swaps in the M97L variants with SCR aftertreatment for nitrogen-oxide reduction — the same outputs, configured for owners cruising under tighter emission requirements. The hull is GRP with carbon reinforcement, with a planing geometry tuned for a shallow draft of less than seven feet. The performance numbers matter less than what the engineering enables: stability sufficient to make the beach club genuinely usable at anchor.

That stability comes from a layered package. Two stabilizer fins handle zero-speed and underway work. Humphree interceptors keep trim disciplined at the higher end of the speed envelope. Two optional Seakeeper NG18 gyros can be specified for owners who want to remove residual roll entirely at rest. The bridge offers three dashboard tiers — the first hull was configured with the super-premium spec, anchored by two Boening 49-inch displays. None of it is decorative. All of it is the apparatus the Dolcevita's social ambitions require to function in real conditions.

A craftsmanship note
The first hull arrived at Cannes with a 2025 World Yachts Trophy already in hand, awarded for Best Exterior Design in the 30–50m category. Officina Italiana Design has drawn every Riva since 1994; its exclusive partnership with the yard was renewed earlier this year and now runs through 2030.
Specifications · At a glance
Length overall
34.37 m · 112 ft 9 in
Maximum beam
7.27 m · 23 ft 10 in
Construction
GRP hull and superstructure with carbon reinforcement
Propulsion · Standard
2 × MTU 16V 2000 M96L · 2,638 hp each
Propulsion · Optional
2 × MTU 16V 2000 M97L with SCR system
Top speed
25.5 knots · Cruising 23 kn
Stabilization
Twin fins · Humphree interceptors · Optional 2 × Seakeeper NG18
Beach club
~35 m² · Folding side terraces
Accommodation
Owner's suite plus four guest cabins · Crew quarters separated by reinforced bulkhead
Exterior design
Officina Italiana Design · Mauro Micheli, Sergio Beretta
Naval architecture
Ferretti Group Engineering Department
Strategic direction
Strategic Product Committee · Chaired by Piero Ferrari
Shipyard
Riva · La Spezia, Italy
World debut
2025 Cannes Yachting Festival

Riva did not need to rebuild the Dolcevita. It needed to find what the line had never quite delivered — a stern that behaves like a beach, an interior that holds two equally serious layouts, an upper deck that earns the word residential. The 112' Super is the answer to a series of small questions the 110' had quietly been asking for seven years.

USA Onboard Editorial
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