国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more

The final build
The final build (Photo: Madeleine LaPlante-Dube)
DIY

How to Build Out Your Subaru Forester for $350 or Less

A father-daughter duo tackle the world's cheapest build-out and give you the guide to try it yourself

Published: 
The final build
(Photo: Madeleine LaPlante-Dube)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

I could give you the spiel about my love of the vanlife concept鈥擨鈥檝e wanted to do it since before Instagram was a thing, I鈥檓 a听camping nerd, I think travel is good for a healthy economy鈥攂ut I鈥檒l get straight to the point: I don鈥檛 think people should build out a vehicle for a price tag that has more than two zeros before the decimal.听

Instead, like any twentysomethingwith a low-to-average paycheck, I looked at what I already had鈥攁 2008 Subaru Forester鈥攁nd thought, 鈥業 bet I could make a cheap build in the back of that.鈥 So I called up Larry Dube, my dad and a software engineer with a knack for woodworking, and hatched a plan. Here鈥檚 what we came up with.听

The Requirements: I didn鈥檛 want to remove my back seats听(what if I had to drive my friends somewhere?), needed听enough room for my 40-pound dog and I to curl up and sleep, and had to have听plenty of storage. But most of all, I wanted to experiment with a design that听virtually anyone could do regardless of their skill level, all for less than $350, which seemed to be about as cheap as I could get听for our design.

The Caveats: I had access to the tools from my dad鈥檚 workshop, which he鈥檚 been filling for decades. Having him around for the project听was a huge asset, because he has a building brain.(It鈥檚 a thing!) And because of him, I know my way around a workshop鈥攁 veryhelpful starting point.听

For anyone lacking听access to tools, fear not: depending on your location, you can rent them at places like 听and听. If you prefer to听own stuff, you can rent-to-own the necessities听at 听or get discounted used tools at Home Depot, Craigslist, and听.听For the purposes of this article, I鈥檒l be pricing out tool rentals听from Home Depot.听

If you鈥檙e new to听woodworking, there are tons of resources available to get you rolling. Check out Instagram and YouTube for pointers and basic instruction. My dad and I turned to听听and got a lot of inspiration from its designs.

The Timeline: We completed听this build over the course of about eight days, working in the time after our nine-to-fivesand on the weekends for a rough total of 40 hours.

This designis in no way prescriptive of what you should do for your own Forester,听other Subaru models, or any other vehicle that you already have. I鈥檓 splitting it up into听parts so you can decide where you want to stop or improvise. (Don鈥檛 want a cabinet but do want drawers somewhere? Raise your sleepingplatform a few inches and utilize that space. Just interested ina bare-bones platform? Ignore the add-ons.) There are countless creative builds out there to draw inspiration听from.听

Pro Tips and Things to Consider

  • Having a plan听beforeyou听start, right down to the hardware and specs, will make the build-out that much easier. My dad and I went back to the drawing board multiple times, even with initial specifics nailed down.听
  • We used the mud mat that came with the car to speed up the build process听by tracing its outline on our plywood. That听made it super easy to cut out the funky design we needed for the back half of the sleeping platform.听
  • Measure everything,听then measure it again. While you鈥檙e doing so, be听sure to account for the width of your plywood鈥攈alf-inch or three-quarter-inch plywood adds听upfast.听
  • Cut your lines as straight as possible. Even a slight curve in the wood can make things like hinges or drawers impossible to close or lay flat. Sanding down anything curvy can help in a pinch鈥攂ut it鈥檚 also a pain in the ass.
  • Make sure your car is on level ground while you鈥檙e working on it. This becomes important when you鈥檙e trying to get that听platform just right. (You鈥檒l thank me when you鈥檙e not sleeping at an angle.)
  • This should go without saying, but remove all of the car tools underneath your Subaru鈥檚 floor storage. I鈥檓 pretty sure that my car鈥檚 jack is now permanently built in to my Forester.听
  • We found that, in our area, Home Depot was generally cheaper than Lowe鈥檚. (No, this isn鈥檛 an ad for Home Depot or Subaru.)

Step One: Empty Out Your Car and Put in Your Base

Materials:听

  • One full sheet of half-inch sanded plywood
  • Jigsaw

Even without removing its听seats, Subaru Foresters (and its听sisters, the Outback, Legacy, and Crosstrek) have听a ton of secret storage; aside from the spare tire well, there are pockets on either side in the way back, tool-storage areas under panels behind the听back seats, and lots of space where passengers would normally rest their legs.听The well where your spare tire lives is perfect for a small battery or nonessential gear. For our build, we cleaned out the back, attached the spare to the roof with bungee cords, laid听the seats down, removed all of the additional car tools hiding beneath storage flaps鈥攅xcept for that aforementioned jack, oops!鈥攁nd measured everything out.听

For our design, the sleeping platform had听three sections: the base, the top, and a听removable flap that would go over the folded-down back seats. Lay your base first鈥攚e used half-inch sanded plywood, cut to fit with a jigsaw. This will serve as a sort of anchor. Some builds screw this platform into the frame of the car. We didn鈥檛, and in our testing, it has听proven听completely sturdy. If you鈥檙e听using that spare well as extra storage, don鈥檛 forget to cut a hole in the base that will allow you to access it.

Pro Tip:听If you have no mud mat, lay down parchment paper or cardboard where the mud mat would have been, and trace its permeter. For beginners, this is an easier way to get a really tight fit, rather than measuring all of those odd听angles. You鈥檒l want to use this strategy again, in step two,听to trace the top of the platform.听

Step Two: Raise Your Sleeping Platform

Materials:听

  • One full sheet of听three-quarter-inch sanded plywood
  • One eight-foot-long two-by-four
  • One eight-foot-long two-by-six听
  • Two chest latches听
  • Three 36-inch piano hinges听
  • Package of one-and-five-eighths wood screws
  • One 12-inch piano hinge (optional)
  • Jigsaw
  • Circular saw听
  • Electric drill

Repeating the same process described in step one, retrace that mud mat on a sheet of three-quarter-inch plywood鈥攖his will result in the top of the platform. Don鈥檛 forget to cut a panelso you can reach your lower storage听from听this top section as well (we let our panel rest on pieces of wood and just lifted it out, but you can add a hinge here based on your preference鈥攕ee photos above).To support听the听platform, we used a two-by-six听sectioned into three parts and shaved down as needed with a table saw (a jigsaw and some good sanding can also do the trick here)听to make sure the entire platform would be level. Perpendicular to those two-by-sixes, we inserted听a two-by-four at the base of my car鈥檚听back seats to hold up the front end听of the top platform. This听two-by-four is key: you鈥檙e going to want to cut the top panel so it rests at just about the halfway point of it, because the removable panel that will go over your seats needs to rest here, too.听

We also used the three-quarter-inch plywood to create the removable panel that would go over the seats. We got slightly overexcited about the design here without thinking about how clunky it might be to take out, so definitely riff on our idea. The platform we came up with consists听of four parts: two rectangles in the middle and two flaps on either side to accommodate for the space near the doors. We attached these parts听together with piano hinges, so the听entire piece folds up like an accordion for removal and storage听(see the听above photos). When flat, the panel听lays on the lip of that aforementioned two-by-four, and once it was allfastened in, we attached the two halves of the sleeping platform together with a couple of chest latches.听

Once everything is听said and done, you鈥檒l findthat the听two-by-fours beneath your platform create some pretty nice storage in the corners of your car. This wasn鈥檛 in the plan, but I also cut a section out of my sleeping platform, popped a piano hinge on it, and created another accessible storage area. In addition, we听popped in a simple pull-out table on one side; it鈥檚听made from听scraps of听plywood, with听two-by-sixes for the legs, and is attached by . Modify at will!

Pro Tip: A circular saw will help you cut straighter lines than a jigsaw. Use it anywhere where hinges are involved.听

OK, before we move on to step three, which is totally optional, take a look at your car鈥攜ou now have pretty much everything you need to car camp! From here, you can decide to make the sleeping platform a few inches higher and put in some drawers, or you can take out your back seats entirely and add听a ton of extra storage. We opted to insert听cabinets because we liked staying up until 2 A.M. working on modifications. But most people are normal.听

Step Three: Incorporate Cabinets and Drawers

Materials:

  • One full sheet ofquarter-inch plywood underlayment
  • A second full sheet of听half-inch sanded plywood
  • Wood glue
  • Package of one-inch wood screws
  • One 24-inch drawer slide set
  • One 12-inch drawer slide set
  • Six cabinet hinges
  • One folding hinge
  • Three L brackets
  • Circular saw

The talk of the town in the LaPlante-Dube听household during the build process听was this cabinet unit, which is sweet but relatively complicated for beginners. It was really helpful to have my dad around to make this design a reality. (This is the guy who听used to saw apart his sisters鈥 bikes to听create a 鈥淗arley鈥 of their combined pieces.)

We built the cabinet unit outside of the car, measuring for height as well as the thickness of the boards we would be using, and fastening听it onto the back half of the platform with L brackets. Disclaimer: we put it on the passenger side of the car, but I鈥檇 recommend putting it on the driver鈥檚 side鈥攖hat makes it easier to see what鈥檚 going on in the passengerblind spot. Second disclaimer:听with the addition of this cabinet, your sleeping platform is only good for onlyone person and a dog.听

The cabinet unit is made of three parts: a听drawer as the base and,听on top of it, one cabinet in the front and one in the back. To accommodate the seats coming up,the front cabinet is hinged to fold into the sleeping area (my dad added a little table platform on the back of this cabinet as a fun extra; check out the photos above). We fashioned it so the front cabinet could also pull out like a drawer鈥攐ne modification possibility听for people who are interested.听

Pro Tip: Since this is an optional part of the build, I won鈥檛 get too deep into the details here. But building drawers for the first time can be听tricky; they require drawer boxes and tight frames, super straight lines, and patience with extremely small screws, all of which tested me. There are a 听on YouTube that can help you go over the simple mechanics of it.听

The Build in Real Life

The scariest part about this process听isn鈥檛 the sharp tools or the tiny screws or the moths flying around your late-night construction听scene鈥攊t鈥檚 making sure it all actually works.听Since I built out my car in July, I鈥檝e taken it on a handful of off-road trips here in New Mexico, and I鈥檓 happy to report that even on the bumpiest of roads, the cabinet faces stay shut, the unit hasn鈥檛 shifted, and once I鈥檓听parked, it鈥檚 provided听plenty of room for my five-foot-two-inch frame and dog.听Still, there are some things I would change: as previously mentioned, I would shift the cabinet unit to the other side of the vehicle, and I would definitely paint the entire build听in polyurethane up front: plywood stains easily and absorbs water, and having even a little protection from a muddy dog or spilled听camping beer would be better than nothing.听

Tool and Hardware Index

Wood:听

  • Two full sheets of ($74听total)
  • One full sheet of听 ($41)
  • One full sheet of underlayment ($16)
  • One听听($4)
  • One ($8)

Wood Total: $143

Hardware:听

  • Two packs of wood screws
    • ($2.50 for 40)
    • ($9.21 for 75)听
  • ($4)
  • Two ($8 total)
  • Three ($12 each)听
  • Two ($7 each)
  • Three ($3.19 each)
  • Six ($1 each)
  • Three ($2.75 each)
  • One ($30 for two pairs)
  • One ($13.49)

Hardware Total: $141.02

Tools:听

  • Jigsaw (rental: )
  • Electric drill (rental: )听
  • Circular saw (rental:听)
  • ($4 and up)
  • ($4.29)

Tool Total: $69.29

Grand Total: $353.31

Lead Photo: Madeleine LaPlante-Dube

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online