If a helicopter tiny house does not cut it, why not convert an airplane into a tiny house. Yes, an airplane! All you need to do is find a decommissioned private jet, gut it out and then add the necessary living spaces. Easy right?
Actually, it is just the airplane cockpit and a good part of the first few rows of passenger seats that was used in a Birmingham couple's built as featured on "George Clarke's Amazing Spaces." But for just £750 and a total of £11,000 for the total built, who would have thought that he got it done when the former Swiss Air Avro RJ 100 passenger jet might have cost more than £50 million when it was built by British Aerospace in the 1990s.
The front has custom-cut glass wall and doors to maximize natural light while the interior retains most of the airplane's features. Wood panels are used to cover the barebone aerospace aluminum to make the living space warm and cozy. Edgy furniture were used to accentuate the marriage of metal and wood. The cockpit has been gutted from all its wires and instrumentation where it now serves as a hang out space.
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