If you want a peek into how the rich and famous live, look no further as YouTube channel Barcroft Cars. They just got a glimpse into an RV formerly owned by actor Will Smith. Built by Anderson Mobile Estates, lavish does not even begin to describe this monstrosity of an RV.

Will Smith Wanted The Works

This A-lister RV is a monster, not just in size but in plush features. Think a 30-person screening room, a $200,000 kitchen, and a decadent $300,000 worth of leather alone.

Obviously, this much expanse, some 111 square meters (1,200 sq feet) of it cannot run on four, eight, or even 12 wheels. So this RV runs on 22 wheels and has another deck on top. The lower level also has four pop-out rooms for completely decadent living while on the road.

Will Smith commissioned the RV with no luxuries barred. It has to be the tallest, widest, biggest, and most luxurious RV ever imagined. Ron Anderson, from Austin, Texas, is the man behind the two-story designer trailer, dubbed the Studio Mobile Estate.

Related: 15 Things To Know About Will Smith's Humongous Motorhome

Will Smith Sold It Off Later

The $2.5 Million RV Once Owned By Will Smith
Via: YouTube

Smith no longer owns this RV, but that is no skin off Anderson’s nose. Apparently, this RV is yours for the night, although the rent is a steep $9,500 per night, given the sheer space inside.

Anderson has been making RVs for stars and other rich and famous people for 20 years now and got into Hollywood via Sylvester Stallone. It was Stallone who spread the word about Anderson and so Will Smith contacted him for something unique. Given the sheer scale and luxury of the RV, Anderson definitely delivered. With 14 TV sets, lots of tech gadgetry, and a lighted make-up mirror, living on the road is no hardship in it.

The bathrooms are ostentatious as well and the only thing this RV is missing is perhaps a pool. Clearly made for a Hollywood A-lister who wants to be at home on the road, this RV puts every other luxurious car out there to shame.

And what’s even more surprising is the origin story. Anderson and his team built it from scratch, modifying an old bus he had. One that he used to use as a blood vehicle in the medical field. That Studio Mobile Estate is quite a far cry from what Anderson used to do early on in his career and suits Hollywood just fine.

Source: YouTube