A bit inside the box, a bit outside the box, the Maxvan Access camper is like no other camper we've seen. In fact, we're not sure whether to call it a camper van, B+ motorhome or something else entirely. Most RV makers build inside the factory van or create their own module atop the chassis, but Maxvan does a little of both, pushing out the driver-side wall to increase livable space.

The result is something of a split-bodied camper van with an open floor plan further enhanced by the likes of a Murphy bed and deconstructed hideaway bathroom. Maxvan is the recreational vehicle spinoff of Georgia's Adaptive Mobility Systems, Inc, a wheelchair-accessible minivan conversion specialist. In 2014, Adaptive's lead product designer Jordan Boston decided to try something new, focusing his passion for camping and hiking into a small RV build.

Starting with the surplus of Dodge Caravan minivans and corresponding parts at Adaptive, Boston developed a wood-free fiberglass/metal camping module that turned minivan into mini-RV, creating one of the more unique small campers the world over. While Maxvan built just over a dozen of its 1.0 Mini RVs to the delight of eager buyers, building an entire camper module and all the components for a minivan-camper ultimately proved too labor-intensive and inefficient to pursue further.

Boston and company began developing a more traditional Class B-style RV based on the longer, taller, more flexible Ram Promaster van, a preferred motorhome base all over th.