Wednesday, June 4, 2008

News about Airstream Trailers

It’s all part of a vision that started with Becker’s exposure to philosopher/visionary/engineer R. Buckminster Fuller during Becker’s college years at Michigan State University in East Lansing. Fuller opened up a new world vision for Becker, who grew up in the Rogers Park neighborhood, and then moved to Wilmette at the age of 11 when his father, a real estate appraiser, found his talents in high demand by the insurance industry. Becker said he “fell in love” with Fuller’s ideas, such as: “Democracy does not function without enabling technology for the individual.”

He became a Fuller disciple, working with him intermittently between 1966 and 1982, and then went out into the world hoping to create Fuller’s vision of “future ecological villages.”

He set out to enable individuals through technology, and spent stints designing Airstream trailers in Toledo, Ohio; low-cost manufactured housing near Elkhart, Ind. and Chevrolet’s ill-fated Corvair in a GM facility in Warren, Mich. Becker claims what really did the Corvair in was not Ralph Nader’s book Unsafe at Any Speed, but rather the car’s potential fuel-economy capacity that disturbed the oil companies, who put pressure on GM executives. Learn more...

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