
Custom Build: Apollo
Built on a Ford Transit 148 High Roof, Apollo is a compact custom camper designed around weekends shared with friends. Opposing benches and two adjustable Lagun tables create a flexible social hub for dining, games, and working, while generous cabinetry and a flip-up counter keep the interior organized. By leaving out a dedicated indoor shower, the layout preserves the open, comfortable feel the clients wanted for road trips, ski weekends, and gatherings at camp.
Build Specs
- Queen size bed
- 4" High density foam mattresses
- Full body 3M insulation and sound deadening
- LVP flooring
- Butcher block countertop
- Convertible dinette
- Painted wall and ceiling
- Plywood cabinetry with laminate finish
- Kitchen cabinetry
- Upper cabinetry
- Partition curtain
- (3) x Lagun table
- Smoke & CO Alarm
- Fire extinguisher


A Party Van in a Compact Footprint
Two long, opposing benches and a pair of independently adjustable Lagun tables let up to six people sit face-to-face for meals, card games, or a relaxed evening at camp. Each tabletop can rotate and reposition as the group changes, so the same space works for a couple in daily use or a full group of friends. It is a true party-van layout without giving up the easy size of a Transit 148.
More Storage, More Prep Space
Overhead cabinets on both sides, lower cabinetry, and storage below the benches keep food, clothing, and trip gear organized. In the kitchen, a flip-up butcher-block extension adds prep and serving space when needed, then folds away to reopen the aisle. The result is a compact galley that supports cooking for a group without permanently taking over the living area.


Workspaces for the Whole Crew
The swiveling passenger seat pairs with its own Lagun table, while the two rear tables provide additional work surfaces across the facing benches. That gives three to four people room to open laptops at the same time without crowding around one fixed desk. When work is done, the tables rotate aside and the cabin returns to an open space for dining and relaxing.
Designed Around Real Priorities
The right design starts with the owners' real routines and protects space for what they use most. Apollo was planned for weekend travel, ski trips, and hosting four to six friends, so a dedicated indoor shower was intentionally left out. That decision creates a clearer aisle, a more open cabin, and more room for seating, storage, cooking, and a comfortable bed.














