NASCAR driver Casey Mears has found a way to make life on the racetrack more like home.

Mears, who spends multiple weekends away from his Charlotte, North Carolina home, enjoys life in a customized 2006 Prevost H3-45 motor coach that he shares with his wife, Trish, and their two young children (4-year-old Hayden and 7-year-old Samantha).

Mears drives the No. 13 Chevy SS for GEICO and, while racing in the 2016 GEICO 500 race at Talladega, gave us a sneak peek into his home away from home.

"Thirty weeks of the year we're in it," he said. "Now that the children are older and have school, they don't get to come every weekend. The novelty of it may have worn of some with them, but they still enjoy coming."

Mears purchased and designed the motorhome ten years ago, before he had a family, and paid particular attention to the design of the interior.

The home includes a living room, kitchen, eat-in dining area, master bedroom and a bath and a half. The living room has a fold-out sofa and crib, while the full bathroom has a built-in washer and dryer.

Mears said his family spends most of the time in the living room, and they enjoy cooking together in the roomy kitchen; he often relaxes between races, practice sessions and other race track activities by watching television from his living room recliner or bed.

The design is elegant and serene; colors are neutral chocolate browns and beiges, with steel appliances and modern electronics.

"I designed the interior to a particular style before I got married so it may be a bit masculine, but my wife likes it," he said.

The motor coach has 200,000 miles on it, but the model can last for up to a million miles.

Mears said that the only necessary updates have been to electronics and technology-driven features. Televisions, for example, have been replaced.

The home serves as Mears' home base on weekends throughout the NASCAR season, as he flies to tracks on Thursday and then home again on Sunday. A full-time driver (who has been with Mears for the entire ten years he's owned the motorhome) takes care of it during those times.

Mears is proud of the way the motorhome serves his lifestyle.

"I want it to look and feel like a home," he said. "I chose a design that makes it look and feel like a home, not a limo or a party vehicle."