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Eddie Bauer Ascent Airstream
http://blog.firstascent.com/2010/03/19/behind-the-scenes-designing-the-first-ascent-airstream-for-the-ultimate-road-trip/
1958 Stanley
A Culturehaus Event (August 2008)
Culturhause and Design CouncilĀ of the Denver Art Museum hosted an open house event at Timeless Travel Trailers on August 13th, 2008.
Click here for photos of the event
Denver Business Journal (March 2007)
Tucked away on a quiet country road off of I-25 and 52nd Street in Wheat Ridge, Timeless Travel Trailers (TTT) transforms dingy, archaic trailers into, well, anything you want.
Need a mobile kitchen? You got it. Want a big-screen television with satellite channels hooked up in your traveling oasis? It’s all yours.
Timeless Travel Trailers, now in its fourth year of business, is devoted to restoring, designing and customizing America’s oldest sweetheart on the road: the travel trailer.
TTT is the only company doing custom work in cooperation with Airstream Inc., maker of the long-popular recreational vehicles with the familiar aluminum bodies. Airstream is based in Jackson Center, Ohio.
“We’re not changing the original vehicle, we’re just improving on it and making it completely personal,” said Brett Hall, president of TTT.
Continue reading the rest of the Denver Business Journal Article
Frontier Wild Blue Magazine (January 2007)
Fortune Magazine (December 2006)
While many shops around the country specialize in Airstream customizations and restorations, one stands way out: Timeless Travel Trailers (timelesstraveltrailers.com) in Wheat Ridge, Colo. TTT can create any interior you desire — from leatherbound library to mod Jetson pod — using the best materials, highly experienced craftsmen, and the most up-to-date technologies. TTT’s clients tend to be Hollywood types and business moguls, who typically spend anywhere from $45,000 to $160,000 to personalize their trailer. Interestingly, 55% of those customers are single women in their 50s. “They like the smaller 16- to 18-foot trailers,” says founder Brett Hall. “There’s a cuteness factor to them, and they are manageable to tow.”
Continue reading the rest of the Fortune Article