Hi Uspandey (is that your first name?),
Thanks for the kind words
The colour temperature of both shots is on the low side of normal (in the 3000 to 4000 kelvin range), although there's a big difference in tint. To be honest, there's such a mixture of sodium & flourescent (and tungsten) lighting in the area that it's impossible to white balance the shot correctly (take a look at the colour of the dingy strapped to the back of the yacht in "going vertical" and then the colour of the yacht itself; vastly "different colours" even though they're both white) - so even getting a good starting point is hard ... in fact I spent more time on that part than all the others put together. Usually in these types of shots I know that I'm going to have fairly high vibrance & saturation inputs so I often push them hard to start with and then see where the colour temp and tint can take me; often I'm looking for something approaching gray in neutral areas (which is quite a narrow zone when vibrance and/or saturation are cranked up) - and then backoff / fine-tune the vibrance and saturation from there.
So at the end of the day it's not a deliberate "play" on WB - just whatever looks good - but I try to find "whatever looks good" using a little bit of a methodology so it's not just a completely random guess.