Martin Love, The Observer Magazine
The retro, aircraft styling of the exterior is in stark contrast to the modern interior. Gone is the smoked-glass, wobbly plastic shelving and wall-to-wall beige colour schemes of today’s caravans. Instead you’ll find tasteful, dark-stained wood panelling, leather seating, oval-shaped sinks, backlit storage compartments and splashes of lime green and orange. It’s a mobile boutique-hotel room.
Click here to read the full article
Laura James, The Aga Magazine
I’ve just woken up on the last day of the half-term holidays to a view I can only describe as magnificent. The sun is rising over Derwent Water, great skeins of geese are streaming overhead and the Lakeland fells are bathed in warm reds and browns.
The view inside is pretty good too. It’s all shiny and aluminium with sleek lines and the kind of curves that could only belong to a design icon. I’m in an Airstream trailer in the middle of the Lake District National park and it’s seriously groovy.
Click here to read more
Chris Evans
“Lucky boy me, why do any of us live in houses in the first place?” on living in an airstream for nine weeks while his house was being renovated.
Click here to view more
The Sunday Times, Steve Berry
“The airstream is (and I apologise for using tis overworked and pretentious phrase but in this case it really does apply) a design icon”.
Click here to view more
Hello magazine
On ‘James Martin’s Brittany’; “he has opted to stay in a caravan, albeit a state-of-the-art one with surround sound system and plasma TV”
The Mail On Sunday, Live magazine
“There are caravans, and there are caravans. We’d like this one please!”
Paris Hilton
Check out our video, see for yourself…..
Carol Lloyd, SF Gate San Fransisco Chronicle
Just as nothing denigrates people like calling them trailer trash, nothing disparages a home like dubbing it a trailer. But in the world of movable homes, there has always been a name that invokes something elemental and universal, superior somehow to the earthy mundanity of buildings. Airstream.
Matthew McConaughey, Architectural Digest
"It's just a really cozy place to sleep," he says of his bedroom, which he nicknamed the Honeycomb because of its rounded ceiling. "The thing about small spaces is that they're relaxing," says McConaughey. "You're limited in your options."
Click here view more
Fortune Magazine
Celebrities such as Tom Hanks, Matthew McConaughey, and Sandra Bullock use them as mobile dressing rooms; corporations turn them into clever brand experiences on wheels -- Pamela Anderson even transformed hers into a "Lovestream" (I'm not sure I want details). The moment was right to finally climb inside one myself.
Click here to view more |