A $500,000 federal grant will help the Museum of the North preserve Bus 142, popularized by the book and movie “Into the Wild.” The grant will cover the cost of hiring a preservation company to do the work.
the bus from a spot near Denali National Park and Preserve and moved it to Fairbanks.“Making it safe for people to walk around in it, for us to move the bus to the exhibit site,” Linn said. “But it’s also about preserving the surface of the bus both inside and outside, so that we can preserve all the graffiti and all the epitaphs that have been placed on the surface of the bus.”“This very well-known and well-respected conservation team out of Pennsylvania, BR Howard and Associates,” Linn said.
Although the project is focused on preserving the bus as is, Linn notes that because it will eventually go on display outside, missing and broken windows will be replaced. The plan calls for exhibiting the bus behind the museum on the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus, in a fenced area protected by a shelter.
“So that the direct sun and the snow and the rain and the heavy-duty element exposure will be a little bit lessened,” Linn said. Linn said another grant is being applied for to build the bus shelter. The museum is also working with the nonprofit group Friends of Bus 142 to raise money. Linn said the museum hopes to open the bus exhibit in 2024.
In the meantime the public can view the bus as it’s being worked on inside UAF’s Usibelli Building, as well as