Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Man Lives In A Boeing 727 In The Middle Of The Woods

ruce Campbell is an inventive engineer who bought a retired Boeing 727 aircraft fuselage and upcycled it into an unusual and innovative home. The huge 3-engine commercial airliner is propped up on concrete pillars in a suburban wooded area outside of Portland, Oregon, and has its own driveway.
The aircraft features a makeshift shower, but he is still working to install a working lavatory and to restore some of the plane’s original interior elements, like seating and lights. Campbell lives in this plane 6 months every year, and spends the other part of the year in Japan, where he is also looking to buy and similarly re-use a retired Boeing 747 fuselage. The 10 acres where he’s building his Oregon home cost $23,000 when he bought them in his 20s, and the plane set him back $220,000.


Retirement into an aerospace class castle should be every jetliner’s constructive fate. They should never be mindlessly scrapped” – said Bruce Campbell, the aircraft’s owner (and resident).
Image credits: John Brecher
Image credits: John Brecher
Shredding a beautiful and scintillating jetliner is a tragedy in waste, and a profound failure of human imagination
Image credits: 
Image credits: John Brecher
Jetliners are masterful works of aerospace science, and their superlative engineering grace is unmatched by any other structures people can live within
Image credits: John Brecher
Image credits: 
They’re incredibly strong, durable, and long lived. And they easily withstand any earthquake or storm. Their interior is easy to keep immaculately clean because they are sealed pressure canisters
Image credits: John Brecher
Image credits: 
You need to acquire two things: An airliner, and suitable land to host it
Image credits: John Brecher
Image credits: John Brecher
Then you need to transport your airliner to your land. That’s the most daunting challenge
Image credits: Airplane Home

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