After a good run of posting every two days for a while, I had to shut up and focus entirely on work. I have been monumentally busy the past several weeks, but you don’t want to hear about that. The most interesting part of it (Airstream-wise) has been finishing up the cabinetry project that I began before our last trip to California and Nevada.
If you haven’t read back that far, here’s a re-cap: We wanted to get rid of the tired old laundry & microwave rack that we whipped up while full-timing, and make the area more functional. I removed everything on the curbside of the trailer from the entry door to the refrigerator wall. Originally this was a fold-out credenza with two huge chairs, as shown in the floorplan.
Those chairs took up too much space and we got rid of the first one before we had even towed a mile. (As far as I know it is still serving as bachelor apartment furniture in Ohio.) The second one exited while we were full-timing. We stopped in Florida for a few days and a friend fabricated a counter extension to run along the curbside wall (atop a narrow shelf that isn’t depicted in the floor plan). We bought a cheap wire rack at a housewares store and muddled the whole thing up into a storage space for a microwave and a small laundry bin. This was a little crude but it worked for six years.
Eventually we started keeping our recycling in a little cardboard box behind this wire rack, and shoes began to collect beneath the rack. Then we added a catalytic heater on the wall by the refrigerator. Eleanor began storing water jugs on the floor behind the rack, too, and we noticed that the recycling bin was often too small.
The point of all this is that gradually we had modified the space to suit our style, and we had noted what didn’t work about it. After eight years it was safe to conclude we had a clear pattern of use and our “wish list” was based on experience rather than infatuation. So when Mike & I ripped up the old floor, rebuilding the curbside storage was part of the plan.
I finally finished it last Friday, and I’m very pleased with how it came out, considering that it was a mish-mash of old and new materials. I tried to re-use as much as possible of the Airstream plywood because it’s very lightweight, and to keep the look somewhat reminiscent of the factory styling. The fold-out credenza is still there, but it has been moved to a new location further forward and off the wheelwell. (Kyle and I did that a few weeks ago, and you can see how it was done in the earlier blog entries.)
Added to it is a new microwave shelf suitable for a 1.2 cubic foot microwave, a shelf below the microwave for one of Eleanor’s large pans (probably a cast iron skillet), a black recycling bin that is twice as large as our old cardboard box, room for two 12-packs of canned drinks or four gallons of drinking water, space for the sink covers/cutting boards and a few paper bags, a much larger shoe cubby, the same laundry bin, and a semi-hidden storage shelf for small items like headlamps.
The big win of the whole thing is the huge new countertop, made of black walnut with four coats of polyurethane. It measures 18″ x 71″ by itself (8.8 square feet), and gains another couple of square feet when the credenza is fully deployed. With three people in an Airstream and lots of things going on simultaneously, you can never have enough tabletop space.
The only thing we lost in this conversion was a magazine rack, which I will replace later when we find a wall-mounted rack that we like. No rush on that.
To build this thing took far longer than I had hoped. That’s partly because I didn’t make it easy on myself. I didn’t like the standard steel L-brackets that were available at the hardware store, so I bought lengths of 3/4″ aluminum L-channel and cut brackets from it on the table saw, then drilled four holes in each of them. They aren’t as stiff as the steel brackets but they are a lot lighter and still strong enough. Plus, they’re aluminum—need I say more?
The Airstream didn’t make things easy either. You can’t count on square, level, flat, plumb or tight in a travel trailer. Things move, and they need to flex during travel. So every cut was “custom,” to accommodate gaps, unevenness, and just plain awkwardness resulting from the original construction. Eleanor and I had to stop several time and ponder ways to cover up unexpected issues. I also had to design the cabinet to be light, strong, and yet able to flex a little where needed. Overall, I think the job probably took about 30-40 hours and at least a dozen hardware store runs.
So it feels great that it’s done, and I think it looks pretty good. Sure, the black walnut doesn’t match the original furniture color, but I don’t care. It looks much more sophisticated than the original stuff. Because the shelves are black melamine, and the microwave and recycling bin are black, they all tend to visually disappear so cabinet doors are unnecessary. Eleanor even found black no-skid material to line her pan shelf.
For those who are interested, here’s a bit more trivia: We used the 3/4″ aluminum L-channel to make trim edges and lips for the shelves. It’s screwed to the melamine with 3/8″ stainless screws. The microwave is attached to the shelf with self-adhesive Velcro and a security strap (made of aluminum) screwed to the side. A low vertical divider holds the recycling bin in place. We found the little organizer (pictured with the headlamp in it) at The Container Store. The countertop, despite being solid wood, weighs only 19 pounds. The entire structure weighs about 35 pounds, not including microwave, which is probably less than the original furniture and the two chairs we pitched out.
The key here is that this design suits our way of life when we are traveling. We need convenient, reliable, practical, and durable stuff. We aren’t glampers or weekenders, we’re long-distance travelers and we live in our Airstream for months at a time. Your needs will probably be different. Customizing your Airstream is just like customizing your fixed-base home: everyone has their own needs.
I have never met a full-timer or long-distance Airstream traveler who hasn’t modified their Airstream quite a bit. Even people with brand-new trailers do it. So if you haven’t yet, my advice would be to think about what you do, what you carry along with you, what you most feel is lacking in your interior, and starting planning a few small customizations of your own. It’s easy to start with something as small as an organizer or a hat hook. But beware—despite the many hours this latest project took, I can tell you that modding the Airstream is addictive. There will be more in our future.