Stampede Trail bus moves to UAF engineering building
Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
Oct. 7, 2021
                              		
                              	
 
                              
                              Fairbanks Transit System Bus 142 arrives at the »¨˝·Ö±˛Ą campus Wednesday, October 6, 2021 at the Engineering, Learning and Innovation Facility's high bay structural testing lab.
Bus 142 is back in the public eye.
 
On Wednesday afternoon, the University of »¨˝·Ö±˛Ą Museum of the North moved the 1940s-era
                           bus, made famous by Jon Krakauer’s book “Into the Wild” and the 2007 film of the same
                           name, to the university’s engineering building in Fairbanks.
 
It will spend the rest of the academic year in the building’s high bay lab, where
                           museum staff, engineers and conservators will continue the painstaking work of preparing
                           it for display at the museum. The lab, which is visible from the building’s atrium,
                           will offer a warm place to work and the public’s first chance to see the bus since
                           its removal from the Stampede Trail last year.
 
“The process of preparing Bus 142 for permanent display is a lengthy one, but its
                           presence in the engineering building will allow the public to follow along with that
                           process, both here in Fairbanks and online,” said museum ethnology and history senior
                           collections manager Angela Linn. The museum plans to install a webcam so that the
                           public can view the conservation work online.
 
Bus 142’s fame grew from the story of Chris McCandless, a 24-year-old man who died
                           at the bus in 1992. The remote site north of Denali Park became an often hazardous
                           destination for visitors inspired by McCandless’ story. Some of those visitors were
                           injured or died on the journey, which prompted the »¨˝·Ö±˛Ą Department of Natural Resources
                           to remove the bus from the Stampede Trail in June 2020. Three months later, the bus
                           arrived at a storage facility in Fairbanks, where museum staff began conservation
                           work.
 
Throughout the winter, the museum team will take detailed photographs and 3-D scans
                           of the bus, and will build a structure to support the bus frame. During the spring
                           semester, they will work with UAF engineering students on design and fabrication of
                           a cover for the exhibit, which is slated to be outdoors just north of the museum on
                           the »¨˝·Ö±˛Ą campus in Fairbanks. In the next year, specialists
                           in historical vehicle conservation will begin to prepare the bus for exhibit, a process
                           that involves both repairs and cleaning, as well as preservation work.
 
 
                              
                              A group of students gather to observe Fairbanks Transit Bus 142 at the Engineering, Learning and Innovation Facility Wednesday, October 6, 2021 at the University of »¨˝·Ö±˛Ą Fairbanks campus.
“Our goal is for visitors to experience the complete story of the bus: Its journey
                           to »¨˝·Ö±˛Ą, its role in Chris McCandless’ final months and the decades of public interest
                           following his death,” Linn said.
 
Members of the public can view the bus from the engineering building atrium weekdays
                           from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and online via a soon-to-be installed webcam, which will be
                           linked from the museum’s website.
 
MORE INFORMATION
Support the preservation, interpretation and exhibition of the bus by visiting https://uaf.edu/museum/collections/ethno/projects/bus_142/.
Find a history of Bus 142 and an interactive community at the .
NOTE TO EDITORS: High-resolution photos are available for download from the .
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