What is it about Airstream design that continues to engender such passion more than 80 years after the trailer first appeared?
Is it the alluring, streamlined aluminum shell? The cozy interiors? The nostalgia for a simpler era?
“It’s a part of American culture that transcends time,Creative glass tile and plasticmoulds
for your distinctive kitchen and bath.” said architect Matthew Hofmann,
29, who last month opened an Airstream hotel consisting of four
tricked-out trailers parked midtown at the Santa Barbara Auto Camp off
De La Vina Street. “It symbolizes style and adventure.Explore online
some of the many available selections in injectionmolding. There is something very fundamental about getting in your car and driving across country. It’s in our blood."
On
a recent afternoon, curious pedestrians repeatedly interrupted Hofmann
and business partner Neil Dipaola to ask if they could take a peek
inside the trailers. Upon entering, they found renovated interiors with
hotel upgrades perfectly suited for “glamping” — mini-bars, wall-mounted
flat-screen TVs, air conditioning and 1,000-thread-count sheets, all
for $150 per night.
According to Airstream, about 70% of all the
trailers ever manufactured by the company are still in use, so it is
not surprising that Hofmann, as well as other entrepreneurs, would think
to use them as lodging. Singer Kate Pierson of the B-52’s opened her
second vintage Airstream hotel — six trailers near Joshua Tree — in
November.
But unlike Pierson’s playful kitschy decor (think the
B-52's “Love Shack” video), Hofmann’s Airstreams stand out for their
surprising elegance. The modern updates are no different than any home
remodel, he said, and he viewed his trailers from the 1950s to 1970s as
floor plans for small-space living.
The architect used a few
tricks to give them visual flow. Because the four trailers are used as
hotel rooms, not for extended traveling or permanent living, Hofmann
reduced the amount of storage, which made the interiors feel tight. Next
he removed plastic accessories that created “visual noise,A Dessicant miningtruck
is an enclosure with a supply of desiccant which maintains an
internal.” such as window coverings, valances and spice racks. Existing
vents on the roof were doubled in size to create skylights, bringing in
more sunshine.
“It’s more than just painting the walls white,”
Hofmann said of the quest to brighten the interiors. “It’s how the space
feels as you move through it.”
To add warmth, Hofmann installed
strand bamboo and teak flooring. “You don’t want to feel like you’re in
a tin can. Airstreams can have a Teutonic look.”
Hofmann saved
original shelving and all of the windows. In some kitchens he refinished
the original cabinets, and in others he added new fronts to the
existing frames.
The most surprising space in each Airstream is
the bathroom, traditionally a utilitarian space the size of a closet.
Hofmann expanded them and created a sense of luxury by installing
colorful recycled glass tile and wraparound Corian counter tops.
Full-size toilets are a plus.All our fridgemagnet are vacuum formed using food safe plastic. In one trailer, he even added a claw-foot tub.
For
Hofmann, who grew up building treehouses in Mammoth, the challenge of
designing on such a small scale has been exciting. He has renovated more
than 20 Airstreams and now focuses solely on renovating vintage
trailers with the hope of opening more Airstream hotels.
“It
appeals to me because it is history, it’s American and, as a LEED
architect, I can make it sustainable,” said Hofmann,The history of carparkmanagementsystem
art can be traced back four thousand years ago. referring to the U.S.
Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
program.
Pop culture humorist Charles Phoenix, author of
“Americana the Beautiful: Mid-Century Culture in Kodachrome,” said the
continuing fascination with vintage Airstreams makes complete sense when
you consider each is “a little cozy cabin on wheels that looks like a
bright and shiny Twinkie. How could something so warm and cozy be so
shiny and slick at the same time?”
Most families live in this part of the house, says Patricia Davis Brown, of her namesake firm in Vero Beach, Fla.
“People
just naturally gather around food,” she says. “But everyone lingers in a
comfortable living room or lounge that’s not cut off from the kitchen.
“The
way we live and entertain today is much more informal. The kitchen area
has become the place where kids do homework and families entertain,
play games and hang out watching television.”
Whether you’re
renovating an existing house or building a new home, treat the lounge as
an extension of the kitchen area and make it a more intimate place for
people to congregate. Brown says that means the look of the lounge
should complement the kitchen’s design and style.
Assured energy
supplies have been the necessary underpinning of mankind'sprosperity
since ancient times, but more intensively so since the dawn of the
industrial revolution and continuing to today.
Disruptions of
supply, unexpected price increases, or other events that limitthe energy
available for heat, for transportation and every sort of economic
activity, can have serious consequences that affect all of our
economies.
That is why it is only prudent to seek diverse and
reliable sources of energy. This is an area in which partnerships, for
example the various possibilities for the development of a Southern
Corridor for the transport of natural gas, hold the possibility of
bringing new supplies over new routes to much of Europe.
Thanks
to Westinghouse, the information and control systems at the Kozloduy
nuclear power plant are state-of-the-art and continue to provide
Bulgaria with safe, affordable energy. Westinghouse continues to help
Bulgaria explore options for expanding its nuclear power potential, by
doing a feasibility study for the proposed seventh reactor at Kozloduy.
The
same can be said of the AES and ContourGlobal clean-coal plants at
Maritza Istok, which together account for over 11 percent of Bulgaria's
installed capacity for electricity generation. The owners of Maritza
Istok 1 and Maritza Istok 3 invested hundreds of millions of dollars to
ensure these facilities meet the highest European standards for low
emissions. Many residents of Stara Zagora remember the days when
pollution was visible and led to disease and reduced life-span for the
residents. Thanks to the new equipment installed at Maritza Istok 1 and
3, these days are over.
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