I have been working on a passenger spacecraft for Orbiter. Not quite a pleasurecraft or a cruise ship, but something that makes sense for transporting passengers- unlike stuffing five people in a DG cabin for two years. The Arrow is a good ship, but IMO its true purpose should be as a spacecraft that can go from LEO to the Martian surface and back again. I'm aiming more for a general craft that can take two Deltagliders and their passengers to multiple destinations throughout the solar system.
I present the Tumbling Passenger Ship Concept:
In orange: central truss, also contains transfer tunnel to the habitation module. I may redesign the spacecraft so that the truss is in tension while under thrust.
In grey: docking node.
In green: propulsion module.
In light blue: radiators. Need to be reworked into a more suitable configuration.
In dark blue: habitation module. Living space for 28 people.
In red: Delta Glider-type spacecraft. Could be DG, XR1 or DGIV, although provision is made for XR2.
Once coasting, the spacecraft spins on the X axis to generate artificial gravity. During acceleration however, "up" becomes "down". Cargo, personal items and other systems must be placed in a manner that will prevent shifting or damage. Passengers lie prone in their rest bunks. Cockpit section is designed to swivel through 90 degrees to function either during cruise or acceleration.
Artificial gravity is around 1 g, generated by spinning the craft at just under 1.9 RPM. Acceleration is around 1-1.2 g.
Maximum service velocity is around 200km/s and Delta V is around 500km/s. This is to facilitate high-velocity low duration brachistochrone trajectories between planets.
EDIT:
A tractor design, with the propulsion system pulling the habitation module and the docking node and the main truss in tension has another advatantage- the direction of gravity during acceleration and rotation is the same. It seems like the more advantageous option.