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Well, if you are happy then good on you. It looks a lot more comfortable than I would expect though.

Archive: https://archive.today/tRKSm

From the post:

>What's better than living in a repurposed airplane? Living in two, according to pilot Joe Axline. The 62-year-old spent roughly a quarter of a million dollars to have the two aircraft, which are both no longer functional, repurposed into his dream home. Built on a plot of land bought by the native Texan from a privately owned airport in 2011, the costly creation today costs him just $200 a month to live in and maintain.

Well, if you are happy then good on you. It looks a lot more comfortable than I would expect though. Archive: https://archive.today/tRKSm From the post: >>What's better than living in a repurposed airplane? Living in two, according to pilot Joe Axline. The 62-year-old spent roughly a quarter of a million dollars to have the two aircraft, which are both no longer functional, repurposed into his dream home. Built on a plot of land bought by the native Texan from a privately owned airport in 2011, the costly creation today costs him just $200 a month to live in and maintain.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

I remember seeing those really early shipping container house builds or the early "tiny house" builds. You could put that stuff together for under $25k and even less if you took your time and used a lot of "free/found/recycled" materials (lots of job sites will let you take anything out of their dumb bins for free since they are charged by the pound).

Now, you want to build something like this? It starts at like $80K+ defeating the entire points from the start.