Not Your Dad's RV

TOY-HAULERS: Behind the living quarters of the Komfort Karry-All is storage space for sports gear, plus a retractable sky deck
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Cla

rence Thomas — yes, that Clarence Thomas — loves to hit the road in what he calls his "condo on wheels." Shaquille O'Neal bought his own mobile McMansion last summer, a 37-ft. Fleetwood Discovery, and he didn't even need to supersize it. And in January, after finishing his second term as Governor of Maine, Angus King set out with his family on a five-month cross-country odyssey in his big Newmar Dutch Star, which in place of a rearview mirror has a dashboard video screen hooked up to an aft-mounted camera.

Recreational-vehicle sales are booming, and the appeal of RVs is much broader than in their previous heyday, the free-wheelin' early '70s, when they earned a reputation as gas-gulping retirement homes. Today RVs are being bought — and rented — by a younger and more affluent crowd. At the same time, more and more baby boomers are reaching the age at which Americans traditionally buy RVs. Some owners see their RVs as escape vehicles in case of terrorism. Other, stressed-out families just want to vacation without the hassles and worries of air travel — and bring a little bit of home along with them.

Or a lot of home. To attract upscale, first-time buyers, RV makers are offering new levels of luxury and size (think of a 225-sq.-ft. hotel suite with a kitchen and a surround-sound theater). "The average RV owner isn't Joe Six-Pack anymore. It's Joe Chardonnay," says Mike Duncan, investor-relations chief for high-end-RV maker Monaco Coach. The industry has also been winning over the sporty set with vehicles that include not only living quarters but also loading ramps and cargo space for Jet Skis, kayaks, ATVs and dune buggies. As for gas mileage, some new motor homes — the industry term for self-propelled RVs, as opposed to ones that must be towed — are surprisingly efficient. Winnebago CEO Bruce Hertzke notes that his company's sleek mini — motor home, the 22-ft., $62,000 Rialta, comes with a kitchen, double bed and bathroom and gets better gas mileage than the SUV he drives to work.

It's no coincidence that RVs are getting spruced up just as image-conscious boomers, now 39 to 57, head into their prime buying years. (Boomers are turning 50, the typical age of motor-home buyers, at a rate of 350,000 each month.) Today's low interest rates not only make RV loans more attractive but also leave buyers feeling wealthier after refinancing their home mortgages. While most of the economy sputtered last year, the RV industry was catapulted out of a downturn and into its second best year since the Iran oil crisis pummeled the business in 1979. The industry tends to be one of the first to recover from a recession; after a gut-punching 2001, factory-to-dealer deliveries jumped 21% last year to 311,000 units, and sales approached $11 billion. Rentals were up by a third. "The demographics are pretty locked in for the next 25 to 30 years," says Hertzke. "Our whole industry is going to do extremely well."

The fastest growing segment of the RV market has been buyers ages 35 to 54. Dave Davidson, 40, a father of three who owns an electrical-contracting company near Los Angeles, is one of thousands of recent first-time buyers who had not seen themselves as RV types until after the terrorist attacks of 2001. "You started thinking about things that are near and dear to you," Davidson says, "and how quickly it could all be taken away." A year ago, he bought a 40-ft. National RV Islander motor home for $190,000, complete with a queen-size bed and a skylight in the shower. He and his family have already logged 16,000 miles to such destinations as Aspen, Colo., and Graceland.

Guy Russo, 36, a kitchen and bathroom renovator in Chester, N.J., looked to an RV when his daughter, then 12, became afraid of flying after 9/11. Like many other recent buyers, he has been surprised by how many young families he meets at RV parks. "When we bought our RV, we thought, 'O.K., we're going to have to deal with a lot of older people,' but it's not always like that," he says.

"Getting into a motor home is so much easier than messing around with airports," says Jeff Barr, 41, a homebuilder in St. Louis, Mo. His family should know. His wife was a flight attendant for 17 years, and until she got laid off in January, the family could fly free. But that didn't keep the Barrs from buying a secondhand, 38-ft. motor home last September for $137,000. They keep their 2001 Holiday Rambler Endeavor stocked with food, clothing and toys so they can just hop in and go, which they do at least twice a month, often to NASCAR races (where they park on the infield and then climb on top of their rig for a good view).

The RV's reputation isn't completely rehabilitated; you can see that in the Oscar-nominated movie About Schmidt, in which Jack Nicholson's recently widowed character turns to his Winnebago Adventurer for solace after his depressing retirement party. Offscreen, however, some RV technology rivals that of luxury cars (and boats), including infrared thermal imaging for better night vision, automatic leveling systems for a smoother ride, GPS navigation and broadband Internet access via satellite. RVs range in size and shape from Spartan tents on wheels (starting at $3,500) that can be towed by the family car to cushy bus-size motor homes (typical cost: $130,000). Custom-built RVs from Marathon Coach of Coburg, Ore., and Featherlite Inc. of Cresco, Iowa, can carry $1 million price tags. The industry's strategy is to hook young buyers with a cheap towable and keep them upgrading every few years as long as their budgets allow.

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