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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,500
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

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Single-story layout centers on a vaulted great room and dining space that opens toward the kitchen and rear porch. Four bedrooms split left and right. The master suite sits privately off the entry with its own bath, closet, and attic access.
Foyer to Dining Room Flow with Exposed Beam Ceiling and French Doors

Looking through the arched entryway, the dining room draws your eye straight to the French doors and the green yard beyond. Shiplap ceiling panels run between exposed wood beams overhead, with a four-shade chandelier anchoring the space. Back in the foyer, an open wood console holds books and a potted plant, keeping the entry functional without feeling cluttered.
Warm Neutrals and a Linear Fireplace Ground This Farmhouse Living Room
Exposed wood ceiling beams run overhead while a linear gas fireplace stretches low along the wall below a mounted TV. The seating arrangement keeps things unfussy: two accent chairs face a dark round coffee table, flanked by a camel sofa loaded with patterned pillows. Natural light floods in from oversized windows.
The Linear Fireplace as a Room Anchor
That low-profile linear fireplace does a lot of work. Stretching nearly the full width of its wall, it creates a horizontal counterpoint to the tall vaulted ceiling, keeping your eye from drifting upward and losing the room’s sense of warmth. The wood mantel shelf above it is intentionally shallow, holding just a few objects without competing with the fireplace itself.
Black Pendants and Brass Hardware Pull This Kitchen Into Focus

Three oversized black pendants anchor the island, their gold interiors bouncing warmth onto the marble countertop. The black French-door fridge with brass pulls ties back to the pendants without feeling forced.
Material Matters: The island’s waterfall-edge marble countertop pairs with a cantilevered overhang supported by dark metal brackets, a detail worth noting up close. Black appliances in a cream-cabinet kitchen work because the brass hardware bridges the contrast rather than letting the two finishes compete. Quartz or natural marble both appear in kitchens like this, but the veining here reads more like engineered stone given the consistency of the pattern.
Black Pendants and a Vaulted Ceiling Give This Dining Room Unexpected Scale

Four drum pendants cluster above a long natural wood table, drawing the eye up toward the vaulted shiplap ceiling. Gray upholstered chairs sit on walnut legs, grounding the pale oak flooring without competing with it. French doors to the left pull in greenery and borrowed light. Behind it all, the kitchen’s range hood and double ovens are right there, no hallway required.
Style Math: Pairing black fixtures with warm wood tones works because the contrast stays warm rather than cold. Brass hardware on the cabinetry keeps the black from reading as industrial. It’s a palette with just enough tension to feel intentional without feeling decorated.
Vaulted Shiplap Ceiling and Tufted Headboard Set the Tone in the Primary Suite

Tall ceilings clad in shiplap planks give this bedroom real volume. The tufted upholstered headboard anchors the bed wall while a brass-based lamp on the dark nightstand adds warmth. A chaise at the foot of the bed doubles as a landing spot.
Quick Fix: A chaise at the foot of the bed pulls double duty better than a bench because the angled back gives you somewhere to lean. If floor space is tight, push it slightly off-center rather than centering it on the mattress so the room doesn’t feel symmetrical to a fault.
Marble, Matte Black, and a Steel-Frame Shower Make This Primary Bath Worth the Splurge

That shower enclosure earns every square foot it takes up.
Steel-frame glass panels with a grid pattern give the shower a factory-window quality that contrasts sharply with the veined marble walls inside. The freestanding tub sits closer to the vanity than you’d expect, which makes the floor feel intentional rather than crowded. Matte black faucets on an integrated marble sink keep the palette consistent without feeling heavy.
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Exterior photo of a dark green farmhouse with a covered porch paired with a detailed single-floor plan below.
Style Tip: Vaulted ceilings in the great room and primary suite read dramatically on paper but pay off even more in person. If you’re comparing plans, check the ceiling height callouts, not just the square footage. A room that’s 18 feet wide with a vault feels much larger than its footprint suggests.
