
The question that comes up every time a second generation is moving in — where does everyone get space without losing privacy — is basically what the Angus Heights was designed to answer, with a walkout basement that gives in-laws their own entry and daylight, Craftsman covered porches where two separate morning coffees can happen simultaneously, and an upper-floor owner’s suite that actually closes off from the rest of the house. Sunday dinners still pull everyone back to the main level, which is the whole point.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 3,982
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 4.5
Floor Plan

Main floor shows primary bedroom, family room, kitchen, office, covered deck, and a four-car garage wing.
Floor Plan

Four bedrooms up top, and Bedrooms Three and Four share a Jack-and-Jill bath — which is going to settle a lot of arguments. The upper floor splits into two zones connected by a hallway off the staircase, with Bedroom Two tucked toward the front and a loft opening near the stairs. That “Open to Below” section keeps the whole level from feeling boxed in.
Floor Plan
Lower level offers three rec rooms, a bar, exercise room, sauna, and guest suite with private bath. Covered patio adds outdoor living access.
Style Math: Sauna plus exercise room plus bar stops being subtle pretty fast. What saves it is the guest suite sitting physically separated from the rec spaces — that separation matters enormously once in-laws actually move in, not just visit. The rec square footage down here rivals what plenty of homes dedicate to their entire main floor.
Stacked Stone Reaches the Rafters and Earns Every Inch of That Wall

White oak floors, exposed black steel beams, and a fireplace surround built from ledgestone that runs floor to ceiling without apology. Pendant clusters drop at varying heights over the seating area, and two sofas face each other rather than the TV — a layout choice that keeps conversation central. It takes some restraint to pull off, but this room earns it.
Material Matters: Ledgestone applied floor-to-ceiling on an interior wall needs a proper ledger board and careful weight distribution, especially on upper floors. Natural stone veneer panels are lighter and read nearly identical from across a room. Whichever route you take, grout color ends up doing more visual work here than most people expect when they’re spec’ing it out.
Sculptural Pendant Lights Do the Heavy Lifting Above Marble and Light Oak

Brass hardware runs consistent through every cabinet pull and faucet. Those cage pendants are doing real work over an island that’s long enough to actually matter.
Budget Tip: Marble countertops photograph beautifully but need sealing every year or two to hold up against oils and acids. Quartzite is harder, looks similar, and skips most of that upkeep. If the budget allows only one splurge surface, save it for the island — that’s where it gets seen.
Corner Glass and Open Prairie Make the Dining Room Feel Borrowed from Outside

Floor-to-ceiling black-framed glass wraps two walls, pulling in an unobstructed view of dry grassland and low mountains beyond. The light oak dining table sits on a patterned wool rug, and the chairs have a curved back profile that softens what’s otherwise a very rectilinear room. That sculptural pendant overhead is earning its keep.
Black Window Frames and Why They’re Doing More Than Looking Sharp
Dark-framed windows have a structural visual function: they act as a drawn border around the view, which tricks the eye into reading the scenery like a framed piece of art — similar to how a matte changes how you perceive a photograph. On new construction, that frame color is typically a powder-coat finish applied at the factory. Repainting later is more involved than it sounds, so it’s worth committing early.
Fluted Wood Wall and Prairie Views Doing All the Work

Vertical fluted oak panels wrap the headboard wall floor to window, grounding the room without heavy color. The bench at the foot of the bed and the oversized round ceiling fixture keep things spare but not cold.
Designer’s Secret: Fluted wood panels read best on a single wall rather than wrapped around the whole room — limit them to the headboard wall and the texture does its job without making the space feel like the inside of a barrel. Natural oak tones also hold up better over time than darker stained versions, which collect dust along the ridges in a way that’s hard to ignore once you notice it.
Marble Slab Feature Wall and Freestanding Tub Justify Each Other Completely

That dramatic stone panel behind the tub isn’t tile — it’s a single slab with veining you can’t replicate at scale. The vanity pairs dark cabinetry with gold hardware and a marble countertop that echoes the same tones, and the peachy flowers on the counter are doing quiet work keeping the whole thing from going clinical.
Fun Fact: Freestanding tubs look best with enough clearance on all sides to walk around them, and positioning one against a feature slab like this works because the stone provides a visual backdrop without crowding the fixture. One thing worth flagging early: plumbing for a floor-mount filler needs to be roughed in precisely before the slab goes up. There’s no easy adjustment once the stone is set.
Open-Riser Stairs and a Glass-Walled Office That Doesn’t Hide Anything

Floating oak treads on a steel stringer share the foyer with a glass-enclosed office where two circle artworks handle most of the decorating. It’s a spare combination, but the sightlines through the glass keep the foyer from feeling like a hallway.
Rattan Pendants and a Dark Ceiling Cutout Make the Living Room Earn Its Square Footage

Three tiered rattan pendants hang from a freeform dark ceiling inset that gives the open-plan room something to organize around — without that anchor, a space this size tends to feel unresolved. Polished concrete floors reflect the warm light back up. An arched doorway leads to what looks like a bar or prep area, and the open-riser staircase on the right keeps the sightlines honest.
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Exterior photo shows a modern Craftsman with wood accents and a three-car garage. Floor plan below reveals 2,707 square feet with a primary suite, family room, and covered deck on the main level.
