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SF Artist Jay Nelson Hacks Vehicles Into Incredible Faceted Mobile Homes
Posted By
Bridgette Meinhold
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Architecture,Art,Design,Other Gadgets,Transportation |
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Nelson, who is originally from Southern California, studied painting and drawing at both Bard and CCA. His work draws upon his love of surfing, the beach and experiences he had as a child helping his father do projects around the house. Rather than building things completely from scratch, Nelson enjoys the challenge of transforming things because of the resulting creativity found through restricted design limitations. “When we have limits, we have to compensate and force creativity,” Nelson said in an interview with CCA.
Nelson’s collection of adapted campers includes functional live and work spaces, which are all fully mobile. To make his functional vehicle structures, Nelson starts by imagining what he wants to make and then sketching out the concept to figure out how it will be built. Then he builds the skeleton, which informs the final shape of the addition. Next comes the plywood cover, whose cracks are filled in and then sanded. After the basic structure is built on, he fiberglasses it and then cuts out windows before a final waterproofing. The resulting shapes are geometric and faceted, largely due to his material of choice.
Besides building and transforming mopeds, bikes and cars, Nelson is working on many other installations including storefronts and their interiors as well as a number of treehouses. Nelson finds a strong correlation between building treehouses and his crazy little geodesic mobile homes in that they both have boundaries and limits. Just like he had to build an enclosure to match the size of the Honda, he must also study and analyze a tree and its shape to build a treehouse.
When life handed SF artist Jay Nelson an old Honda CRX for $200, he decided to hack the little hatchback into a completely functional live/work space complete with surf racks. You may remember seeing the coupe cum camper vehicle on the cover of ReadyMade last year, but this isn’t Nelson’s only faceted vehicle transformation. He’s also hacked a rowboat, a moped, and made an electric airstream-like camper from old bikes. The results of his adaptive hacking are functionally fantastic and geodesically…
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Nelson, who was originally from Southern California, studied painting and drawing at both Bard and CCA.
[3]
His work draws from his love of surfing, the beach and experiences he had as a child helping his father do projects around the house.
[4]
Rather than build things completely from scratch, Nelson enjoys the challenge of transforming things because of the resulting creativity found in restricted design limitations.
[5]
“When we have limits, we have to compensate and force creativity,” Nelson says in an interview with CCA.
[6]
His collection of adapted campers include functional live and work space, storage, and are fully mobile.
[7]
To make his functional vehicle structures, Nelson starts by imagining what he wants to make and then sketching out the concept to figure out how it will be built.
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An early sketch of the Honda Civic Camper.
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Then he builds the skeleton, which informs the final shape of the addition.
[10]
Next comes the plywood cover, whose cracks are filled in and then sanded. After the basic structure is built on, he fiberglasses it and then cuts out windows before a final waterproofing.
[11]
The resulting shapes are very geometric and faceted, largely due to his material of choice.
[12]
Besides building and transforming mopeds, bikes and cars, Nelson is working on many other installations, including storefronts and their interiors as well as a number of treehouses
[13]
Nelson finds a strong correlation between building treehouses and his crazy little geodesic mobiles in that they both have boundaries and limits.