Does A Daydreaming Designer’s Semi Sleeper Concept from 1990 Make Sense?

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We’re rearranging our office at home, trying to make it less like a nineties attorney’s lair and more of place where black turtleneck-clad chin scratchers would chill. At one point, a box full of old work that I’ve done fell out of a cabinet, including a tiny mobile living space project. I’d forgotten about this one but since it’s both bizarre, old-skool dated, yet borderline plausible I figured it was a worth a laugh to share, especially since it looks at some different ways to work creating homes in oddly shaped and sized environments. It’s not a camper or RV, but it’s an adjacent mobile living space that might be even more common out on the highways.

This one’s not a fake retro design that I usually do. It’s a REAL vintage concept made during the time when MC Hammer was on the radio and Bill Cosby was still Greatest Dad Ever, so you get that angular look surrounding eighties technology. This was a school project so you know that a.) mechanical considerations took a back seat to idea generation and b.) if you do the math you will see that I’m old as dirt [Editors Note: (softly sobbing at realization of own age) – JT] . I was alive, as my kids say, in the last century.

The design challenge placed before us was aimed at a subset of people that lived in tiny houses before the ‘tiny house’ genre even existed: over-the-road truck drivers. The project was to design one of those sleeper cabs on semi trucks. These still exist today, and you can see some modern examples below. They range in size from just room for a mattress up to Taj Mahal-type spaces:

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source: Business Insider

My initial question when I saw these was how they got that much into such a compact space: the answer is that they didn’t. There’s a massive, cumbersome addition and stretch of the original cab and wheelbase of the tractor.

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Also, while some of these are as nice as high-end motorhomes, much of the design hasn’t changed since I researched this project decades ago. Besides the factory Peterbilt one in the bottom right corner, they still sort of have an eighties finished basement vibe to them.

Our challenge at school in 1990 was to use the space of typical sized sleeper cab and do as much with it as possible. To me, a kid without a grasp of the full limitations of the Real World, that meant going up…and out.

First of all, this was from a time when the overhead air deflectors were starting to appear on the tops of truck cabs for aerodynamics, forcing wind around the boxy trailer. However, quite often this space was totally vacant. By putting sleeping spaces up high, it could free up a lot of room below for living. Here’s a basic overview that twenty-year-old me for some reason forgot to make (or I’ve lost), so much older me had to make it right now (though all of the other images are from thirty years ago):

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On the main level behind the driver’s compartment, there is a full kitchen on one side of the space. Note the ‘cove lighting’ (fluorescent when this thing was designed in pre-LED days) to give a taller ceiling feel. Yes, that’s a good old adjustable CRT TV and a high-tech microwave. The insets show an optional side door (that would reduce the size of the kitchen wall somewhat) and food storage and cabinets with dividers to stop the contents from moving around:

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On the opposite side of the ‘downstairs’, a shower/toilet ‘wet bathroom’ with fold-down vanity sits next to a wardrobe closet. There’s a fold down table as well as a couch folding out of the closet door (the door iis split in two to allow access to the closet when the couch is down).

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The sleeping spaces up top are accessible from a ceiling opening in the center, with a wrap-over skylight and big second windshield to bring in a lot of light (with shades to cover them, of course, though I doubt that would keep you in place if the truck hit something). A ladder on the door of the bathroom allows access to the upstairs. It’s possible that you could have a fold down floor between the two bunks to make one giant bed.

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That front bunk is in the extension over the driver’s cab, and there’s room below for slide out luggage compartments.

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Also, with these old renderings if you screwed something up there was no ‘undo’ or ‘history’ tab; you had to start over. Yes, I wasted my college life only getting high on magic marker fumes locked in a dorm surrounded by blocks of burned out vacant buildings in the heart of the Murder City (but I STILL love Detroit, a real-deal car guy mecca where I’d be more than happy to still live in).

Back to the truck cab – we’ve used the space pretty well, but what if you want MORE room? Here’s where it gets strange and would need a LOT more mechanical thought than I’ve put in – but is still possible?

The idea is that there is always space between the cab of the truck and the trailer to allow the trailer to have range of motion when going around turns. However, when you’re parked (or not towing anything) that requirement goes away. This sleeper would offer a motorhome-style slide-out back to give you a dinette area with skylight that could possibly also be used for an additional sleeping area. You would just need some kind of safeguard to prevent you from driving with the expansive module extended while towing a trailer.

The bar area behind the fold out table- what the fuck was I thinking?

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Above you can see the slide-out extended on the truck in front, while it is retracted on the truck towing a trailer behind it. Below is the another view with the slide-out extended:

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It is good to see that at least some imaginative people have pursued designs like this in the many years since this project was done. I did a search and found a few that with patent drawings:

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source: Google Patents

..and an entrepreneur is searching for investors to manufacture and idea like the one below:

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source: Innovations and More

Up front, the existing factory cab could be outfitted to match the back, with more cove lighting, overhead console with audio and climate controls, plus the expected compartments for Hank Williams cassettes. Door panels bolt onto the existing truck doors and provide electric windows and sound system components, stuff that was not particularly prevalent around 1990.

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It’s all very much a humorously dated product of the eighties, but the ideas of using vertical space, natural light, and offering expansion options are still keys to successful small home design. Also, until self-driving trucks are prevalent, truckers will still exist and face the same challenges of living on the road as they did thirty years ago.

Why can’t more of the road warriors of today finally benefit from some of these motorhome-style innovations?

 

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22 thoughts on “Does A Daydreaming Designer’s Semi Sleeper Concept from 1990 Make Sense?

  1. The problem with a retractable sleeper is you’d never get to use it. Truckers work 70 hours a week, and bobtail runs are pretty rare. If there’s no trailer on it, that truck isn’t making money.

    I suppose you could unhook and pull forward when you stop overnight, but that’s more work.

    1. Old Busted Hotness- the idea of the expansion part was for the situation you just described- it can slide out when you stop overnight without the need to unhook. The only reason you need that space between trailer and cab is to allow room for the trailer to move going around turns. When you are parked it doesn’t matter.

  2. mfinkel- glad that you like it! It’s kind of traumatic to see this again years later since I still can smell the markers, see the chalk/pastel dust and feel the brush to paint on the highlights (the yellow/white ‘bird droppings’ that simulate bright spots). So much damn work…lots of AA cells for the Walkman.

    1. I taped 2 D cells together, and ran a wire thru the lining of my funky leather jacket with tiny crocodile clips to connect to my Walkman in the other pocket. Music for *days*.

      1. Gilbert- that’s brilliant! I hate that I learn these things 35 years too late. Considering the year you probably had shoulder pads in that jacket that would have held lantern batteries.

        I tried rechargeables but they were crap back in the day.

  3. This is cool-even more so because you did it before tiny houses. I see that you actually noted where the HVAC system is: props for that as in that field we usually regard designers as giving no thought to nuts&bolts. Was that final pic of the door panel based on anything at the time? It seems sorta familiar, but I can’t place it except maybe a friend’s half-remembered Taurus—or maybe that’s because someone called the truck out as a Ford? The shape of the door-pull is what catches my eye

    1. TOSSABL- no, it was just kind of a mashup of the latest and greatest of the time, but the most likely influences might be something like an early Taurus/Sable or even the funky shaped on a Bonneville SSEi door panel.

    1. basspaul- also the seats could possibly rotate 180 degrees to become like a ‘living room’ with the ‘dining room’ in the expansion area with the bathroom and kitchen between.

    1. MATTinMKE- if fact, TNG played each week on my roomate’s 13 inch TV set…but it WAS a color television. So that had to have been an influence. If it were the original series then the truck would have had little chaser lights below the windshield and the bath door open automatically with a SHIKHOO sound.

    1. BolognaBurrito- If I recall, cabovers were finally disappearing by this time (1990) since the overall length regulations that had made them necessary were finally relaxed. Supposedly truck drivers have a strong preference for non-cabover trucks for distance driving due to the space, noise, and ride improvements.

      1. I’m aware why they died out (really, I am), but I don’t care. They are cool. Would the semitruck and motorcycle chase scene have been as cool with a Kenworth T800? No! Is Peterbilt FL86 Optimus Prime cooler than Peterbilt 379 Optimus Prime? Hell yes!

        Give me the cabover.

        1. Bologna- there’s no reason that you couldn’t EXCEPT anything going over the cab would need to allow clearance for the thing to tip forward for engine access.

        2. Whoa, came back to this and noticed I left out Terminator 2 in the reference to the chase scene. The FLA 9664 is what really holds that movie together.

  4. Do I get geek points for immediately identifying the truck in the renderings as a Ford LTL 9000? Was there any specific reason for the Ford? Circa 1990 I’d have considered a White since they had the only full width conventional cab.
    Top mount sleepers are a thing in Europe as a way to squeeze a bunk into a minimum length cab, putting one in the roof of a US style is different. The slideout is a clever idea but adds weight, cost and complexity to weight sensitive low margin use case.

    1. Slow Joe- I have no idea why I used the rare-even-then Ford truck. My guess is that is what I had a brochure of and used for reference or tracing. Remember that Google image search was more than a couple years off so we had to use what was available.

  5. this is fantastic. I mean those drawings, especially that exterior view that shows the sleeper fitted to an LTL90000. which is cool. but more so, the *name*.

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