
Everyone remembers the garage of someone who actually made it — floor clean, tools with a system, cars still inside. Atlantis Heights is built around that standard: a three-car garage that earns every foot of its width, an open interior that stays genuinely quiet on a Sunday morning, and a layout that finally matches the life you spent years building.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 3,336
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

Three bedrooms, master wing with study, open great room, kitchen, dining, terrace, media room, and three-car garage.
Horizontal-Glass Entry Doors That Frame the Desert Before You Step Inside

Wood-framed entry doors with horizontal glass panels let you read the terrain outside before the door even opens. To the right, a wide sliding door pulls the patio directly into the room, collapsing the boundary between inside and out in a way that actually works at this scale. Hardwood floors run throughout, walls stay bare white, and the door framing does all the talking it needs to.
Warm Cedar Ceiling Over an Empty Room That’s Ready to Become Anything
Recessed lights sit flush in tongue-and-groove cedar planks above wide-plank hardwood floors, and the dark fireplace surround anchors one wall with enough weight to keep the room from floating away on all that pale wood. Clerestory windows push natural light deep into the space. It hasn’t been furnished yet. It doesn’t need to be.
Dark Walnut Cabinets and a Wood Ceiling That Actually Belong Together

Flat-front cabinetry in a deep walnut finish pairs with light oak flooring and exposed ceiling beams — a combination that sounds like it could go wrong but doesn’t. Glass pendant lights hang low over the island. The stainless hood is oversized and earns its presence.
Quick Fix: Hang one pendant slightly lower at the far end of the island rather than keeping them all at the same height. Varied pendant drops on a long island read as deliberate rather than rushed, and the eye travels the full length of the counter instead of stalling in the middle.
Corner Windows That Pull the Pine Trees Into the Room Without Asking Permission

Carpet keeps the room quiet underfoot. Two corner windows meet at an angle that gives you a wide read of the yard and treeline, while the glazed door beside them adds a direct exit to the patio — useful in a way that most secondary bedrooms never are.
In The Details: Corner window configurations like this one pull light in from two directions at once, which softens shadows and takes the pressure off overhead fixtures during daylight hours. If you’re furnishing from scratch, angle your seating toward the corner rather than a single pane. You get more of the view, and the room stops feeling like it’s turned its back on the best part of the space.
Walk-In Closet Built Like Furniture, Not an Afterthought

Dark walnut laminate panels run floor to ceiling on three walls, adjustable shelving pins visible along the vertical tracks. Double hanging rods on the left leave room for longer coats, the center tower’s angled shelves make clear that shoes were the priority, and recessed bar pulls on every drawer replace knobs entirely. Tight, deliberate work throughout.
The center tower’s angled shelves suggest shoes were the priority.
Quartz Countertop Long Enough to Give Two People Their Own Space

The undermount sinks are set far enough apart that two people genuinely won’t bump elbows — which sounds like a low bar until you’ve shared a bathroom that didn’t clear it. White quartz with subtle flecks keeps the surface from reading too clinical. Chrome faucets are square-bodied and low-profile, and the cabinet drawers run floor to counter with no upper cabinets interrupting the wall above.
Fun Fact: Quartz countertops are engineered from crushed stone and resin, which makes them harder to stain than natural marble and requires no annual sealing. In a bathroom where toothpaste, makeup, and standing water are daily realities, that’s a more practical choice than it might look.
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The top image shows the exterior at dusk: a single-story desert home with stone cladding, horizontal wood siding, and a three-car garage stretching across the facade. Below it, the floor plan lays out a 3,000-plus square foot layout with a central great room, master suite wing, guest quarters, media room, study, and covered outdoor living on two sides.
