Monday, December 7, 2009

Man Spends $50,000 to Recreate a First-Class Pan Am Cabin in His Garage


Anthony Toth is so obsessed with perfectly recreating a vintage Pan Am first-class cabin in his garage that he once traveled to Thailand for—wait for it—original Pan Am branded headphones. And his obsession goes much deeper than that. Anthony began his obsession with Pan Am as a child, when he and his parents frequently flew to Europe to visit family. Pan Am's service seems decadent and almost silly today, when Southwest and JetBlue achieve success with a budget mentality, but to Anthony, Pan Am was the epitome of class and style.

Pan Am was once synonymous with international jet-setting, with upper-deck dining rooms and flight attendants decked out in crisp blue uniforms, high heels and white gloves. First-class travelers were served out of silver-plated martini pitchers. A parade of linen-covered food carts made its way down the aisle at dinnertime.

Anthony saved things like the cardboard linings on food trays and recorded his trips with multiple rolls of film and extensive tape recordings of the radio selection on board. "This consumed my world," said Tosh. As an adult, he works for United Airlines, and two years ago bought a home with an oversized garage in which he could build a faithful replica of Pan Am's first-class cabin. The project has taken him, in total, 20 years.





Construction required multiple visits out to a spot in Death Valley where airplane carcasses are dumped, but the details of his project are unnervingly precise: The replica isn't open to the public, but if you visit (Tosh hosts executive meetings sometimes, appropriately enough), you'll be offered drink service and given a perfectly-crafted souvenir boarding pass designed to match those used by the airline in the late '70s and early '80s. He's got authentic Pan Am swizzle sticks and glasses. The overhead compartments are original Pan Am construction. Hell, he's even got sealed packages of salted almonds (we have no evidence regarding the taste of 30-year-old almonds, but they're probably not for eating anyway).

The one concession he's made to the modern age? A flat-screen TV in place of the old-school projection Pan Am used. Everything else (save the stewardesses) is either original Pan Am or a custom-made replica. He's hoping to open his obsessive ode to Pan Am as a museum, but he seems perfectly content to just hang out in first class.

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

He really has sometime on his hands.

April 10, 2010 at 2:30 PM  
Blogger shonny22 said...

Hi.Helping people mainly poorest of the poor gives happiness & Satisfaction ,neither wasting money this way to find comfort & satisfaction.Donate money to poors.

May 4, 2010 at 11:27 AM  
Blogger Ken Morrill said...

Maybe poor people will be inspired by this and create change in their life to achieve the things they want. Giving money doesn't always help. Living an inspiring life usually does. Food drives, though, are a great idea.

January 5, 2011 at 7:49 PM  
Blogger Ken Morrill said...

Money isn't the key to helping poor people. Living an inspiring life will help people effect the change they desire in their own lives. Sure, a food bank could use the money. But this guy is living his passion. Why should that be taken away. How do you know he isn't donating money to charities. Just because he spent that much money to have something he loves doesn't mean he didn't donate that much to a needy cause. I'm inspired by him. I want to achieve his level of lust for life. That is what solves problems. If we all lived to our fullest capabilities, we would much richer financially and spiritually.

January 5, 2011 at 7:53 PM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home