The Incredibles, the future of saving the human brain: Popular Mechanics
Al Gardner and his brother-in-law built the house in Mount Kisco, New York, back in 1984—two stories, three bedrooms, with a sweet little porch overlooking a sunny backyard. At the time, Gardner had worked in construction management for years. He had, in fact, been mechanically inclined ever since he was a kid, when he helped refurbish a Beaver tractor his dad bought from a neighbor. But the house was the first he ever built from scratch, and he was proud of it. Not many people could say they’d built a house for their family these days. Al Gardner could…