Inside the Stunning Boeing 727 Home in Texas: An AvGeek’s $2.1 Million Desert Dream

Have you ever dreamed of living inside an airplane? Now you can, thanks to a Boeing 727 home in Texas that has captured the attention of avgeeks everywhere.

Through the years, aviation enthusiasts have converted everything from jetliner fuselages to control towers into living spaces. But this one is different. 

Tucked deep into Texas’s Big Bend Country, the “Infinite Skies Retreat” combines the spirit of flight with the solitude of the desert. And solitary it is…this place is in the middle of nowhere. 

The Boeing 727 home in Texas known as Infinite Skies is in the middle of nowhere
From a distance, this Boeing 727 home in Texas doesn’t look like it has 3,040 sq ft of living space. But once inside, the grandeur of the retreat becomes apparent | IMAGE: Infinite Skies

Built in 2023, the property sits on 80 acres near Terlingua, a remote mining ghost town roughly 75 miles from the Mexico-US border and about 15 minutes from the entrance to Big Bend National Park. The home measures 3,040 square feet and features four bedrooms, three full bathrooms, and enough space to sleep eleven people. Despite being off-grid, it has electricity, fiber internet, and plenty of creature comforts. So, even in the desert, you will still be able to stream live ATC.

Inside, aviation imagery fills the walls, from cockpit prints to aerial photography. A covered deck and patio overlook the rugged Texas landscape, while a wet bar, home theater with reclining airplane seats, and a dedicated home office make it a fully functional retreat. The property hit the market on 11 August 2025, with an asking price of $2.1 million.

From the outside, you’d never guess that part of this home once cruised at 35,000 feet. Step through the doors, though, and your eyes are immediately drawn to a 40-foot section of the forward fuselage of a Boeing 727, cockpit and all.

The forward section of the fuselage inside the Boeing 727 home in Texas
Looking inside the Boeing 727 home in Texas at the forward section of the old jet | IMAGE: Infinite Skies

How One AvGeek Built His Dream Airplane House

When the home was built, the frame was built around the old Boeing 727
When the home was built, the frame was built around the old Boeing 727 | IMAGE: Infinite Skies

The idea for the Boeing 727 home in Texas comes from 35-year-old Adam Baker, an avgeek and operations planner for Southwest Airlines in Dallas. In an interview with luxury real estate website Mansion Global, Baker explained that he had dreamed of building a home like this for ten years.

In 2019, Baker paid $60,000 for a piece of vacant desert land featuring its own mountain and a few arroyos. Drawn to the remoteness and beauty of the Big Bend region and the Christmas Mountains, he decided to create something that reflected both his love of aviation and his desire for solitude.

That’s when he found his centerpiece: a retired FedEx Boeing 727-233/Adv, once registered as N266FE. Most recently, the jet had been used as a classroom by California Baptist University’s aviation science department in Riverside.

Getting a Boeing 727 Fuselage from California to Texas

Baker bought it for $30,000, cut it into pieces, and had it trucked from California to Texas. With the help of a crane, he set the fuselage on a custom steel-frame structure that forms the lower level of the home.

Breaking up the fuselage
Getting the 727 ready for transport | IMAGE: Infinite Skies
The aft of what was a Boeing 727
The aft section of the 727 fuselage after it had been cut up in preparation for transport | IMAGE: Infinite Skies
Transporting the fuselage across the Southwestern USA
Baker had the 40-foot section of the fuselage trucked in from California | IMAGE: Infinite Skies

Inside the 727 section, Baker built a bedroom and lounge area that still look and feel like an aircraft cabin. The upper level includes additional bedrooms, a kitchen, and a living room with sweeping desert views. He estimates the total project cost at more than $1 million.

Upper level kitchen
A full kitchen is located on the upper floor of the home | IMAGE: Infinite Skies
Bedroom in the fuselage of the Boeing 727 home in Texas
One bedroom is located inside the fuselage of the old 727 | IMAGE: Infinite Skies
Bedroom in the former cargo hold
There is even a bedroom in the former cargo hold of the Boeing 727 | IMAGE: Infinite Skies
The former flight deck still illuminates
The control panel inside the former flight deck of the 727 still illuminates | IMAGE: Infinite Skies

To complete the experience, Baker added finishing touches that only an avgeek would appreciate: working taxiway lights along the driveway, old Southwest Airlines passenger seats in the theater, and an illuminated control panel that glows as if ready for pushback. The effect makes visitors feel like they’re on the flight deck, not standing in the middle of the Texas desert.

Baker named his creation the Infinite Skies Retreat, and while he lives in Dallas, his hope is for the home to continue as a high-end vacation rental for aviation enthusiasts from around the world.

The History Behind This Boeing 727

The aircraft at the center of this Boeing 727 home in Texas has an impressive pedigree. 

Built in 1979, the Boeing 727-233/Adv with manufacturer serial number 21672, first entered service with Air Canada on 1 November of that year as C-GAAS.

N266FE began its life as C-GAAS with Air Canada

For more than a decade, it carried passengers across North America during the heyday of tri-jet travel. When Air Canada retired its last 727s in 1992, this airframe was sold to FedEx and re-registered as N266FE. 

FedEx 727-233F/Adv (N266FE)

Delivered on 5 May 1993, it went on to serve as a cargo workhorse for two decades before the freight carrier, once the world’s largest operator of the Boeing 727 (at its peak, FedEx operated 170 of the type), retired its remaining 727 fleet in 2013.

N266FE taking off
N266FE, a Boeing 727-233/Adv, was operated by FedEx for nearly 20 years | IMAGE: jetphotos.com

Donated to California Baptist University’s Aviation Science Program

Before its final landing, N266FE was sent to storage at Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorville (VCV) in 2012. In January 2013, it was donated to California Baptist University’s aviation program at Riverside Municipal Airport (RAL), where it became a static teaching airframe. Its registration was officially canceled the following month.

After FedEx, the Boeing 727 was donated to California Baptist University's aviation program
After FedEx, the Boeing 727 was donated to California Baptist University’s aviation program | IMAGE: airteamimages.com

For several years, the old trijet sat quietly on the university campus until Baker bought it and gave it a new mission. The fuselage section used in the home once housed students studying aircraft systems. Now, it welcomes guests who simply love airplanes.

Exterior view of the Boeing 727 home in Texas
The Boeing 727 home in Texas features floor-to-ceiling windows with expansive views of the Texas wilderness | IMAGE: Infinite Skies

With its cockpit lights aglow, original panels intact, and panoramic desert views, the Infinite Skies Retreat is so much more than a home. For us avgeeks,  it’s a living tribute to aviation history. 

From its first flight in 1979 to its retirement and rebirth in 2023, this 727 has experienced nearly half a century of aviation history. For any avgeek with a spare $2.1 million and a love for the open sky, the Infinite Skies Retreat offers a chance to live inside that history—literally.


ADDITIONAL INFO:

Dave Hartland
Dave Hartlandhttp://www.theaviationcopywriter.com
Raised beneath the flight path of his hometown airport and traveling often to visit family in England, aviation became part of Dave’s DNA. By 14, he was already in the cockpit. After studying at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Dave spent several years in the airline industry before turning his lifelong passion for flight into a career in storytelling. Today, as the founder and owner of The Aviation Copywriter, he partners with aviation companies worldwide to elevate their message and strengthen their brand. Dave lives in snowy Erie, Pennsylvania, with his wife, Danielle, and their son, Daxton—three frequent flyers always planning their next adventure. And yes, he 100% still looks up every time he hears an airplane.

Latest Stories

Read More

Check Out These Other Stories From Avgeekery