Skip to main content

Behind-the-Scenes at Van Dam Custom Boats’ Workshop and Design Studio

van dam boats
Chelsea Batten/The Manual

The essence of Van Dam Custom Boats is right there in the name: custom. This company creates wooden powerboats and sailboats of the highest quality and craftsmanship found anywhere on Earth at a rate of roughly two boats per year. This isn’t for lack of customers. Rather, it’s the result of focused, passionate expertise.

About as far as you can imagine from a showroom lineup, a Van Dam boat begins not with a model or template, but with a conversation. Aspiring boat owners sit down with these passionate craftsmen and talk about what is important to them in their future boat, including size, speed, style, materials, or any combination thereof. Where most boat companies use assembly lines and subcontracting to get all the parts needed to build their boats, Van Dam project teams build one boat at a time, all from scratch, all by hand. From framing to electrical to finish, it all happens on site by their expert teams. Every vessel they produce is an original, handcrafted work of art, executed by small teams of nautical polymaths.

We recently had the chance to tour the Van Dam Custom Boats workshop in Boyne City, Michigan, where the Van Dam family has been bringing boating dreams to life since 1977. The whole operation is damn impressive. From meeting Ben Van Dam, current company president and son of founders Steve and Jean, to observing the laser-like focus of the staff as they went about their business washed in a fresh breeze off Walloon Lake, you can’t help but be impacted by the company’s unimpeachable ethos. It’s the kind of place where the passion and attention to detail make you question what you’re doing with your own life.

Boats made by Van Dam are guaranteed for life. But when you have zero warranty claims in over forty years, it’s not a policy on which time is wasted.

In Ben’s words, “Our focus is to build a perfect boat, one that will last forever.” These boats are built to be heirloom pieces, passed down from generation to generation. Given that all the boats that have left the workshop are still parting waters around the globe, they’re well on their way.

In addition to luminous beauty, high functionality, and heirloom brand prestige, Van Dam Custom Boats offers an open-door policy during the design phase. Since many of their customers like to be involved to the last detail, the ongoing dialogue with Van Dam lets each boat owner get exactly what he or she wants, whether that be an interior with mother-of-pearl harvested from Maui or an outline reminiscent of the Batmobile as driven by Adam West. (Yes, those are real customer requests and we can confirm they’re amazing to behold.)

The one thing you don’t see when walking through the Van Dam workshop is an employee base that looks like they’ve got anywhere else to be. The men and women at work on the 50-foot yacht and the 40-foot sailboat in progress at the shop barely look up from their work as we nose around with our telephoto lens and a bunch of dumb questions, adding emphasis to Ben’s comment on our way into the next room:

“When you see something done really well, it puts you in the headspace of approaching what you do in a similar way.”

“When you see something done really well, it puts you in the headspace of approaching what you do in a similar way.”

Given the license for creativity and the absorbing beauty of the materials they work with, it’s not surprising to learn that employees frequently come back to the shop on weekends, whether to put in some more TLC on a client project or to build something special of their own. (It doesn’t hurt that the company schedules production around three-day weekends during the summer months, so the workforce can spend more time out on the water.)

The only thing more exciting than watching the process of these boats being built is riding in one. Luckily, the runabout After Three was available for an early afternoon jaunt over the glacier-clear waters of Walloon Lake. The 28-foot open cockpit, with its creamy mahogany panels, glistening hardware, and the refined purr of its Mercury MerCruiser 350 Mag engine, looks like something you’d see if Wes Anderson directed the next Bond film. At 40 mph, we glide effortlessly over the lake, slicing through the aquamarine water with the grace and panache of a Russian ballet dancer crossing 5th Avenue in a pair of Oliver Sweeney wingtips.

Whether it’s during a ride across a lake or throughout several decades of time on the water, the Van Dam customer never ceases to find new details to appreciate on these beautiful vessels.

Article by Chelsea Batten with contributing reporting from Bryan Thompson.

Topics
Chelsea Batten
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Chelsea Batten is a writer, photographer, and Kerouac groupie. One of the original digital nomads, she was seduced from life…
What does interval mean in Formula 1?
Time intervals have three different purposes in Formula 1.
Yuki Tsunoda driving a Formula One racecar for Scuderia AlphaTauri Honda.

Formula 1 racing is the top level of motorsports and is gaining fans rapidly in the United States. Since F1 racing began in 1950, it has always been an international competition. Formula 1 is governed by The Fedération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA). The FIA F1 Regulations specify the technical, sporting, and financial operations of the ten teams in each year's F1 season. Some people find F1 racing hard to understand because certain terms aren't used in typical ways. For example, the word "interval" has three meanings in F1 racing, all related to time between cars, but for different purposes. We break out the three meanings of time intervals below.
Why time intervals are important in F1 racing

The time gaps between cars in Formula 1 races are often measured in fractions of a second as 20 cars speed around tracks, often reaching speeds over 200 mph. Sometimes, the time difference between the first and last cars finishing a race can be just a few seconds, showing how closely they compete. It's not unusual for cars to finish within tenths or hundredths of a second of each other, so timing is crucial in F1 racing.

Read more
Maserati rounds off its 2025 Folgore lineup with an electric GranCabrio
Maserati's sports convertible goes all-electric
Maserati GranCabrio Folgore

Maserati has unveiled the final piece of its 2024 electrification puzzle in the form of the GranCabrio Folgore -- an all-electric version of its new convertible. The battery-powered roadster was unveiled as part of “Folgore Days,” a celebration of Maserati’s new electric lineup held in Italy’s motor valley. Folgore Days itself is following on from the Formula E racing weekend at Misano World Circuit -- with Maserati being the only luxury brand represented in the electric racing series.

The Trident has gone all out with its latest offering, producing what it claims is the fastest electric convertible on the market. It can do 0-60 in 2.8 seconds and is capable of hitting speeds of just over 180 miles per hour. As with many of Maserati’s sportier offerings, “Corsa Mode” is available and is the easiest way to get the most out of your electric Maserati. The vehicle produces just over 750 horsepower, though with boost, this can briefly reach around 820 horsepower. So the GranCabrio sits alongside its hard-top sibling as the most powerful vehicle Maserati currently offers.

Read more
This is what’s new with the 2025 Subaru Forester
Rather than reinvent models every few years, Subaru focuses on improving each model incrementally.
Right side profile shot of a 2025 Subaru Forester parked on a stone drive in front of a multiple story stone mansion.

Subaru introduced the sixth-generation 2025 Forester SUV in five trim levels. The sixth variant, the Forester Wilderness, remains unchanged for 2025 because Subaru redesigned the 2024 version of the more rugged, off-road trim. Like all Subaru SUVs and most sedans, the 2025 Forester trims have full-time, symmetrical all-wheel drive (AWD), four-cylinder Boxer internal combustion engines (ICEs), and continuously variable transmissions (CVTs).
Why 2025 Subaru Forester trim levels matter

Unless you already own a Subaru, and even then, discerning the changes between years is difficult. Walk on a Subaru dealership lot with new cars mixed with used models, and it's easy to mistake a 10-year-old Forester or Outback for a spanking new version. Subaru doesn't make drastic design changes. The brand's value point is based on reliability and durability, much more than attracting attention with spiffy new profiles.

Read more