Surely the one thing to do is not build it like the last one? Or add in some feature that stops it sinking the same way the last did?
I mean, I'm not so sure about how the first one sank beyond 'it hit an iceberg', but my understanding is new ones have some kind of double skin that stop them sinking.
kd
Maybe this will partly answer your question:
Comparison with the original Titanic
The ship is being designed to be as similar in internal and external appearance to the Titanic as possible. However, modern safety regulations and economic considerations will dictate several major changes to the design, including;
Greater beam for enhanced stability[22][24]
Welded, not riveted, hull[22]
Reduced draught[22]
Bulbous bow for higher fuel efficiency, although moderately sized compared to modern ships[22]
View of a corridor on the RMS Queen Mary showing the sheer. This feature will be lost on the Titanic II.
Stabilisers to reduce roll[22]
Diesel engines driving azimuth thrusters to replace the original coal-fired steam engines[22]
An additional 'safety deck' between C and D decks for modern lifeboats and marine evacuation systems, with the boat deck housing replicas of the original lifeboats. Space for the deck has been made by lowering decks D and below by 2.8 meters, and for the taller centre section of the safety deck, which houses the lifeboats, by raising the superstructure by 1.3 meters. In spite of the reduced draft, space has been made for the lowered decks by removing the orlop deck, which mainly housed the boilers.[22]
New 'escape staircases' in addition to the original staircases, housed in the redundant boiler exhaust uptakes.[22]
Viewing decks in the redundant first two funnels.[22]
No sheer or camber,[22] unlike the original. Pronounced sheer was a cosmetic feature of ocean liners, intended to add a graceful appearance to the ship, but made construction more difficult and therefore costly.[25] Renderings released in February 2013 show an upwards rake added to C Deck at the bow and stern to give a superficial appearance of sheer, although an inauthentic wedge-shaped gap has had to be added between C and D decks in these areas to produce this effect.[26]
A higher bridge, as the superstructure has been raised by 1.3 meters by the centre section of the safety deck, and also by the removal of the sheer.[22] This negates the requirement on the original Titanic for lookouts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanic_II
Not this....
Titanic II is a 2010 direct-to-DVD disaster film written, directed by, and starring Shane Van Dyke and distributed by The Asylum.[1] The film is not a sequel to the 1997 film by James Cameron, although movie website Dread Central has suggested the film may be a mockbuster of it.[2] It was released direct-to-TV in Australia on August 7, 2010. It premiered on SyFy on Sky Digital in the UK and Ireland on August 9 to a strongly negative critical reaction. It was released on August 24 in the United States.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanic_II_(film)
