Former flight attendant Faith Mulvihill, the owner and leasing agent of the 727 Fuselage home, told Business Insider that the unique facilities are the brain child of Hotel Costa Verde owner Allan Templeton.
Upon graduating from Yale, Mulvihill said the "rather eccentric" graduate joined the Peace Corps and never returned to the US.
His latest project was transforming yet another plane, this time from the Soviet Union, into an event center for the resort.
"He never stops," Mulvihill said.
From September through mid-November, you can stay in the suite for $260 a night. Outside of those months, the costs soar north of that price.
And in addition to the fuselage in the sky, there are other villas and condos to rent across the hotel's many accomodations in the area.
This plane originally belonged to the defunct French airmail company Aéropostale.
The airline was the first to fly between France and South America. The clothing brand of the same title found Aéropostale's "sense of adventure" inspiring, adopting its name as a result.
Source: Aeropostale
A little ways down the road from both airplane-turned-hotel suites is the El Avion restaurant, fashioned out of a shot-down Fairchild C-123 airplane.
This one has a rather rough history.
According to Mulvihill, the C-123 is fabled to have been shot down over Nicaragua during the Iran-Contra affair, a secret arms deal-turned-political scandal during the Reagan Administration in which the US traded weapons to Iranian terrorists in return for the release of American hostages.
Funds from the deal were also used to support an armed conflict happening in Nicaragua at the time.
But this area in Costa Rica has clearly been reborn, just like the Boeing 727 home. In its former life, the 727 plane flew on routes conducted by South Africa Air and the Colombian aviation company Avianca Airlines. You could say it's now enjoying its life in retirement.