Dear friends:
I have pretty well laid out a first draft (on paper) of my floor plan for our bus. I basically have a rear bedroom, followed by the walk-through bathroom, and then a bunk-room, then the kitchen, and finally the living room area.
I would like to see what others have done and maybe improve my plan. We are considering the ability to travel with our adult kids and their spouses, and of course, the most awesome grand kids in this galaxy. ;D
Thanks in advance!
My thought is that 35' is too short to have two bedrooms. My 35' bus would not be usable if I had two bedrooms, for more than sleeping. You have to make at least one of the sleeping areas dual purpose. I have seen layouts (more for limo buses) that had a rear lounge area, TV's, couches, that converted to sleeping space. Many RV's convert the dining and living room areas to sleeping with dinettes that convert (quite good for kids, actually, as long as they are still small, and you can build in a bunkbed type of idea for two levels), and the obvious fold out couch. So my thought is to think dual purpose, and remember that after you take away the driving area, you only have 30 feet at most, and remember you have to build in well located and secure seating for every passenger, hopefully with seat belts, since it is no longer a bus.
Brian
You're dreaming if you believe that you have 35' to work with. If you measured the interior from the rear bulkhead to the windshield you'd fine that you have a bit less than 30' of living space.
Do yourself a favor and go visit some RV lots who offer 30' Mobile Home or Campers and look at their floor plans and you'll find out that you're just a little bit short on length to to facilitate your dream.
Best of luck.
NCbob
O.K., my friends! Thanks for you input! I measured this morning, and have exactly 27 feet 10.7 inches (8.5 meters) between the front of my engine shelf to the back of the pilot's seat. So basically I have 28 feet of floor space to work with.
What I had not noticed before was my width (Well, not mine: My bubble belly is quite obvious, even on Google Earth! ;D). This bus is 102 inches wide, instead of the 96 I had assumed! So that means in the 28 feet of floor space, I have an extra 14 square feet to work with.
That's a GREAT "find"!!! 6" is well.......6"!! :D
I too have a 35'er and I have to agree whole heartedly, one of the bed rooms has to be dual purpose. I also use my middle bay as a guest room. (GMC 4108 - BIG bays!) The PO set it up w/TV and mattresses for the kids. He even cut in a trap door for ingress and egress from inside. Cool feature.
Good luck!!!
Chaz
bunkhouse in rear two bed levels with both being full size beds----maybe bunk above driver area across front like some class C raise to ceiling when not in use..then fold out couch..bedroom in one bay with trap door from inside.kids/grandkids would love it..Bob PS was typeing same time as Chaz
I've seen toyhaulers and some shorter RV's that have the main bed set up to come down from the ceiling when needed for sleeping, and raise up when you need the space. Thought it was a cool idea that I never wanted to try to live with, but then I follow the maxim that a bus is for 6 for drinks, 4 for dinner, and 2 for sleeping...
Brian