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Most people just dream about living a completely nomadic lifestyle. Andy Cochrane actually does it.
Most people just dream about living a completely nomadic lifestyle. Andy Cochrane actually does it. (Photo: Johnie Gall)

Living Full-Time in a Toyota Tacoma

How our writer turned a midsize pickup into the ultimate adventure home

Published: 
Most people just dream about living a completely nomadic lifestyle. Andy Cochrane actually does it.
(Photo: Johnie Gall)

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At the end of 2015, I found myself at an inflection point. The Bay Area housing market bounced back, and the owners of my rental decided to sell. I was 27 years old and working long hours at a startup, following a relatively traditional path. I moved all my possessions into a five-by-ten-foot聽storage unit and headed to Mount聽Hood in Oregon for a backcountry ski trip. On the drive back, I totaled my hatchback, sold it for cash, tucked my tail between my legs, and flew home to Minnesota. Like any good origin story, you gotta fall before you get back up.

This unlucky series of events felt聽surprisingly聽cathartic. Not having an address, car maintenance, or monthly rent was liberating. Over the holiday I started scheming, convincing myself that my late twenties聽was聽the ideal time to live nomadically. I worked through a year鈥檚聽worth of finances, sketched a few camper designs, and made a spreadsheet of the parts I would need. This sounds pragmatic in hindsight, but it didn鈥檛 feel that way at the time. I went with it anyway.

I had no interest in vans. I wanted a vehicle that I could get into trouble with, and I was happy sacrificing comfort for it. So I invested in a 2015 Toyota Tacoma Double Cab and added a three-inch lift and all-terrain tires. Tacomas are the pinnacle of reliability, and when they eventually break down, their parts are close to universal. Almost any small-town mechanic can fix one.

Next聽I took the hardest step toward聽truck life: giving my stuff away. Pretty much all of it. Many vanlifers keep a storage unit filled with valuable possessions, but this contradicted my dream of simplicity. My closest friends were rewarded for it like kings. I limited myself exclusively to stuff that fit in the truck, from camping gear to books, tools, electronics, and a small kitchen. As I鈥檝e progressively optimized for longer out-of-office e-mail聽and fewer showers, I鈥檝e gotten more judicious about what comes along.


Turning a truck into a livable space is a work in progress. For me,聽the components for a sustainable nomadic life are storage, solar energy, water, a bed, a fridge, propane, and a better suspension, loosely in that order. My truck is currently on its sixth iteration, and I鈥檓 continually finding new ways to simplify. This is what my current setup looks like.聽

My roof, so to speak, is a Leer 180 truck cap. It鈥檚 a commercial-style camper shell that鈥檚 pretty expensive but聽offers features that make nomadic life much easier and adds a little extra headroom, too. To increase the comfort, I added four interior LED lights, Reflectix insulation, a to help with condensation, a , and that open upward. These windows allow me more access to the bed and create a dark coffin to sleep in, which is great in a city.

(Andy Cochrane)

The centerpiece of my storage system is a custom-built,聽six-foot-long, three-foot wide, six-inch-high drawer that runs the length of the bed. I made it out of three-eighth-inch plywood and half-inch screws. The drawer, which moves on , functions as a kitchen, pantry, bookshelf, snack cabinet, and miscellaneous storage bin. In the four corners of the bed, around the wheel wells, I built custom storage cubbies, which are great for less-used tools and outdoor gear.

The rashest move I made was tearing out the back seats of the double cab. I hadn鈥檛 seen anyone do this before, so I was making stuff up as I went. But looking back, I haven鈥檛 regretted this decision once. On the rear driver side, a couple of plywood cubbies, which hold my clothes, are bolted to the same holes the seats used. I insulated between the wood and metal, to reduce noise and heat loss. Below the wooden structure, I left a spot for my shoes (five pairs). Adjacent to the seat, there鈥檚 enough room for dog food, bowls, and toys.

I decided to put my fridge on the rear passenger side. This proved to be quite challenging, mostly because 90-degree angles don鈥檛 exist in trucks, but by mounting the fridge on a slider, I can simply open the truck door and pull the fridge out for a snack.

The fridge draws its power from a , which runs on three pliable 聽that are attached to the roof. On the left side of the fridge is my propane tank, sitting on its side, which can be turned on and off quickly. I can fill it from this position, too, so it never needs to be fully removed. On the right side of the fridge is the water jug, which is sufficient for about a week or so. This back-seat build took me two long days, with a good bit of help from my dad and friends.

My kitchen is bare bones. A , a few , a聽, a handful of , and a have worked, without fail, for three years running. Wanting to reduce waste, I connected my stove to a 20-pound propane tank instead of burning dozens of the green canisters. I ratcheted the propane tank down in the truck bed, along with the聽 and . It didn鈥檛 take long to learn that this would limit my sleeping space dramatically. Seeing as I spend a third of every day sleeping, my bed needed to take precedent, forcing me to find a new place for my utilities.

(Andy Cochrane)

The crux of living in any vehicle is storage. My solution is a . With 16 cubic feet of space, the box provided enough room for a couple pairs of skis, tents, packs, and climbing and camping gear. It鈥檚 easy to open, locks securely, and doesn鈥檛 wreck my gas mileage, which I appreciate. It鈥檚 also a great way to limit the gear I bring along.

A real bed was actually one of my most recent additions.聽I bought a 聽online and threw a fitted sheet on top of it. Add a couple of pillows, a wool blanket, and a聽, and I have a queen bed that works well in all seasons.

I鈥檓 sure I鈥檒l continue to modify this system, but the key to all of it is: the less you own, the happier you are.

Lead Photo: Johnie Gall

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