
See the progress on the retired BART train being transformed into an Airbnb
The old A-car is now nestled in its Jamestown area spot. Fittingly, it's next to a working Sierra Northern train line.
"They sometimes say you don't want to build your house next to the train tracks, but I was like 'How close can we get?'" said owner Michael Lin.
Longeway Construction has been hired to make Lin's Airbnb plans for the train into reality.
"Every time we drive down here, we kind of look at it and [are] still in awe every time," said Jesse Longeway.
Some heavy-duty engineering has already been done to mount the tracks where the retired train now sits.
"It's in good shape. It smells fine to me," Lin said.
Train 1234 was commissioned in the 1970s. Lin noted that BART said the train was in decent shape already, with the floor having already been rebuilt.
Regrettably, the chairs are of the old plastic kind – not the cloth ones with a unique pattern many Bay Area residents are nostalgic for.
Longeway says the next work coming up will be more cleaning up, including sanitizing the seats.
Construction will also begin soon on the back half of the Airbnb that will connect to the train, which will include amenities like a bedroom, bunk beds, a coffee bar, and a little bathroom.
People can follow the project's progress on the BART train house's
Instagram page
.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
30 minutes ago
- Forbes
Being A Digital Nomad Isn't For Everyone. Could You Handle It?
Being a digital nomad isn't for everyone. Could you handle it? You're scrolling through Instagram, watching another entrepreneur work from a Bali beach cafe, and wondering if you're missing out. Maybe you've already tried the digital nomad life and found yourself exhausted, broke, or back at a desk job within six months. About 18.1 million American workers described themselves as digital nomads in 2024, an increase of 147% since 2019. There are an estimated 165,000 British citizens working as digital nomads. Plus, 7% of the adult population want to do it. But not everyone can. Freelance journalist Emily Bratt discovered the digital nomad truth the hard way. After chasing the sun as a digital nomad, she found herself asking "What am I doing?" The whisper started halfway through her six-month trip and became a pervasive shriek by the end. She's not alone. The lifestyle doesn't solve your problems. If you're unorganised at home, you'll be more unorganised on the road. If you're lonely at home, you'll feel it tenfold abroad. You don't have to romanticise or demonise the digital nomad life. It's just life. Same work, different backdrop. After building and selling my social media agency and spending years as a full-time nomad, I've learned that success comes down to systems, not settings. Signs you could be a digital nomad: work from anywhere If you go into nomad life expecting constant novelty and effortless freedom, you'll be disappointed. The WiFi crashes during client calls. You get food poisoning the week of a major launch. Your Airbnb cancels at the last minute. These aren't exotic travel problems. They're Tuesday. Bratt recalls her own health struggles in Vietnam. Tonsillitis was bookended by rounds of food poisoning, all within two months. She shivered through a two-hour ferry ride, silently willing it to end. Maybe you're the founder who thinks a change of scenery will cure your procrastination. Or you believe that working from tropical locations will somehow make spreadsheets more exciting. The truth hits hard when you're sitting in a stunning villa in Thailand, still avoiding the same tasks you dodged back home. Geography doesn't fix psychology. The people who burn out or bounce back to the 9-5 after trying to become a nomad are usually trying to replicate holiday mode with a laptop. They book destinations based on tourist attractions rather than timezone compatibility. They switch locations every week, constantly packing and unpacking instead of building momentum. That's not a business, that's a breakdown waiting to happen. When you're moving from place to place, misalignment shows. Bratt noticed this multiple times. Watching someone brag about passive income before catching them stressed on a 10pm video call, seeing a life coach who preached positivity scream at a waitress about an overdone steak. You need solid processes, recurring income, timezone awareness, and a brilliant VA who keeps everything moving while you're on a flight, setting up your workspace, or hunting for decent WiFi. Set up your business to run without you before you leave. Test your systems from your home country first. I've been a full-time digital nomad since 2021 and I love it, but that's because I'm intentional. I've built systems that remove decision fatigue, I've got a clear structure to my workday, and I always have the next location planned, even if that changes. Every morning looks the same whether I'm in London or Cape Town. Wake up, focused work block, gym, lunch, calls, evening routine. The backdrop changes. The discipline doesn't. Pick three cities for the year and spend two to three months in each. Book accommodation near a gym with strong WiFi. Find your coffee shop, your workspace, your routine within the first week. Stop trying to see every tourist site. You're not on vacation. You're building a business that happens to operate from interesting locations. Digital nomad loneliness is not predictable. Bratt describes watching friends in Sydney go about their days, making plans before she arrived and after she left. "I was like a time traveller, temporarily injected into their world from another realm," she reflects. You're surrounded by travelers who disappear after three days and locals you can't fully connect with due to language barriers or temporary status. Build community before you need it. Join location-independent entrepreneur groups. Schedule regular calls with mentors and peers. Plan your destinations around conferences or coworking spaces where you'll find your people. Create a travel schedule that friends can access so they know where to visit you. Make maintaining relationships as systematic as managing your business. Do you have the financials in place for your digital nomad dream? Otherwise, you're not running a remote business, you're just running away from life. Calculate your actual costs including flights, accommodation, insurance, and the inevitable emergency expenses. Add 30% for reality. Know your minimum viable income before cutting ties with stability. Maybe you need three solid clients on retainer before leaving. Or six months of expenses saved. Or a product that sells while you sleep. The specifics matter less than having them. Write down exactly how much you need to earn each month, where it comes from, and what happens if a client drops out while you're 12 time zones away. Execute that plan for three months from your home base. If it works there, it might work anywhere. Could you be a digital nomad? Find out before taking the leap For Bratt, the realization came at a Sydney rock pool. After chatting with locals and laughing with old friends, she understood that location wasn't the main determinant of happiness for. Instead, it was people and community, which she could find at home without a cutoff point. She signed a year-long lease in Brighton. The digital nomad life rewards preparation, punishes romanticism, and amplifies everything you already are. If you're prepared and ready, it's the everyday of a lifetime. If you're not, you'll struggle bigtime. Build the business first. Test the systems second. Book the flight last.


Skift
37 minutes ago
- Skift
5 Ways Planners Are Rethinking Incentives
Skift Meetings' upcoming report reveals an industry that remains resilient and innovative, as it is forced to continuously change and evolve. The incentive industry sits at a critical juncture — a period of significant geopolitical and economic turbulence — and its effects are just beginning to make their mark on programs. An upcoming report by Skift Meetings, 'Rethinking Incentives,' reveals the many ways incentive travel is evolving as a result of U.S. government policies, rising costs, tech developments, and shifting demographics. Following are five areas of change: 1. Traditional Incentives are Evolving The incentive travel model that prizes inaccessibility — a level of luxury and exclusivity that you can't create on your own — is changing with the ability of individuals to create one-of-a-kind experiences on their own. Instagram feeds are lined with individual travelers having the same exact experiences that were once the purview of incentive groups. Traditional incentives used to be the norm, but not any more, said Padraic Gilligan, co-founder of SoolNua and an industry thought leader with more than 30 years of global experience. A good indicator of the direction of the incentive market is the leisure market, said Gilligan. 'Today's leisure traveler becomes tomorrow's incentive qualifier. The same mid-level executive who chooses Rabat over Raleigh for her personal break will soon be weighing up a company reward trip. The same European Millennial who skips Vegas for Valencia on ethical grounds will bring that sensibility to the group travel decision-making table. In other words, the patterns are predictable. But more than that, they're actionable.' 2. Layered, Local Experiences Are In There's a growing movement in incentive travel design toward meaningful, personalized experiences tailor toward the individual winners. Incentive travel is also no longer defined by extravagance — it's defined by intentionality. The incentive industry's answer is 'layered experiences,' those which extend beyond a single wow moment to create 'layers of surprise + delight.' No longer does a tour of a popular museum or other local attraction suffice when it comes to cultural immersion. Now they want to meet the maker, and perhaps even try their hand at creating. 'Incentive travel is absolutely still rooted in the idea of providing something irreplicable, but the currency of exclusivity has changed,' said Michelle Orlando, founder and chief event officer, Elevoque. 3. The Next-Gen is Making Its Mark According to the U.S. Department of Labor, Millennials make up the largest share of the labor force (36%), with Gen Z workers making up almost a fifth (18%). This is causing planners to rethink every aspect of program planning. While former generations of winners viewed the annual incentive trip as a chance to get away from home, families are part of an increasing number of trips today. But whether they bring their children or not, younger incentive winners want more choice as to how they spend their time. 'The younger generation is behaving based on their personal values,' said Greg Bogue, chief experience architect at Maritz. 'It's not just about designing the reward, it's about designing the whole program. I think that in announcing the program, capturing the attention, and during the qualification period, there's a lot of opportunity to activate individual values and individual purpose.' 4. Budgets are Stretched to the Max Cost increases as a result of tariffs are hitting event budgets hard at a time when planners have already been navigating rising costs due to inflation. Skift Meetings' 2025 survey of 103 meeting professionals found that rising costs are plaguing the vast majority of planners: When asked about the main concerns impacting their jobs right now, 90% said potential cost increases and 66% said potential recession. A full 82% said they expect event costs to increase in 2025–2026 because of the tariffs. Planners are finding ways to increase the perceived value of the incentive experience without increasing hard costs, by focusing on things like access and status. Offering attendees priority seating at an event, first access to redeem their reward, or a meet-and-greet with a musician or entertainer can add value to the experience at little or no cost. 5. AI is Having an Impact In recent Incentive Research Foundation (IRF) research, 63% of respondents said they either use AI or that they plan to use it to support incentive travel planning. Two IRF studies explore the topic: AI, Uses and Possibilities for Incentives Professionals and The AI Revolution: A Technical Review of AI Capabilities for Corporate Events, Rewards & Incentives. For many incentive planners, the reports say, AI offers the opportunity to tap into efficiency, allowing their teams to focus on more strategic tasks. For others, it is seen as a shortcut for tasks that are not their core competency, such as drafting communications or helping with data analysis. Most incentive professionals are using ChatGPT or a similar generative AI tool for program communications, brainstorming themes, and writing session descriptions. More sophisticated users are turning to AI to analyze employee engagement and performance data, which can be used to create personalized incentive programs tailored to specific demographics, behaviors, and preferences. Incentive industry leaders are cautiously optimistic about the possibilities created by AI. 'AI is designed to enhance, never to replace,' said Stephanie Harris, IRF president.
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sofia Vergara Celebrates International Bikini Day With the Most Apt Video
took International Bikini Day to new, bold levels with her Instagram upload. The 'Modern Family' alum posted a rather apt video to mark the occasion, capturing her posing in a barely-there bikini fit while enjoying the clear waters in Ibiza. The star wasted no time in highlighting her toned physique and quirky personality in the NSFW clip. Vergara's Ibiza trip also sparked rumors that she is dating Tom Brady after their yacht photo went viral. Sofia Vergara enjoyed all the good things that came with her Ibiza trip. Celebrating International Bikini Day on July 5, the reality television judge posted a bold video featuring herself in a skin-baring bikini fit, lounging by the clear crystal waters. The actor has been keeping her fans updated with her fun adventures on the island. Vergara commemorated International Bikini Day by putting her own spin on a bikini. Instead of wearing the conventional two-piece, the 'America's Got Talent' judge stripped down to a risque thong bikini bottom. The clip captured her waving to the cameras as she relaxed by the ocean, flaunting her toned backside and her charming smile. Opting to go topless, the actor completed her look with a pair of black sunglasses, perfect for a sunbathing session. The 'Modern Family' star captioned her sun-kissed Ibiza activity, 'Happy internacional bikini day from Ibiza,' alongside three laughing emojis. Meanwhile, Vergara has been taking fans along her journey through Ibiza. Her trip also included her enjoying high-profile company on the Ritz-Carlton's superyacht Luminara. Her picture with Tom Brady on a yacht went viral, sparking speculation that the two had something going on between them. However, sources close to the NFL star put it all to rest. They clarified that their interaction was nothing but 'social,' and there were 'no sparks' between them. The insiders further claimed that Vergara wasn't Brady's 'type,' but he 'respects' her. The post Sofia Vergara Celebrates International Bikini Day With the Most Apt Video appeared first on Reality Tea.