A CAMBODIAN man has made his lifelong dream of flying a reality after building a custom home 20feet off the ground in the shape of an aeroplane....CONTINUE READING THE FULL ARTICLE>>>
And Chrach Pov, 43, has even bigger plans for the impressive two bedroom and two bathroom home. The determined flight fanatic reckons he’s spent about £15,000 so far after saving up for 30 years for the project.
The concrete construction boasts mock engines, wings and a tail plane, and has created a stir in the district of Siem Reap province where he lives.
Pov said: “I am so excited that I can fulfil my dream now even though it is not yet 100 percent done.” The construction worker plans to build a coffee shopnext to his home for visitors and still hopes to be able to fly on areal plane – though there’s an odd reason why he hasn’t.
Pov admitted he’s nervous about actually flying – so the home will do for now. He said: “I feel so happy to live inside the aeroplane house because it looks like a real one when I walk in.”
Fittingly, his home is under the fly path for his local airport – meaning Pov can watch the real planes while in his own aeroplane.
Another woman has told how she turned a Boeing 727 she bought for just £1,500 into her dream home. Jo Ann spent six months renovating the 12-foot wide cabin – and even found a genius way to transform the cockpit.
The beautician decided to start on the project after her own home was destroyed in a house fire. She started working on the aircraft after her brother-in-law, air traffic controller
Bob Farrow, suggested the idea. The woman bought an old Boeing 727 that was destined for the dump for $2,000 in 1994.
The plane which ran from May 11, 1968 until September 20, 1993, was shipped to a plot of land in Benoit, Mississippi.
The house – nicknamed “Little Trump” after Donald Trump’s $16-million corporate jet – has three bedrooms, a living room, a full kitchen, a laundry room, and a master bathroom inside, according to Airport Journals.
Some of the plane’sfeatures were kept the same- such as one of the bathrooms that was kept as a toilet and overhead luggage compartments that were used as storage space…CONTINUE READING>>