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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,419
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

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First floor puts the primary suite and great room at opposite ends, with the kitchen, dining, mud room, and a wine closet connecting the middle. Stairs suggest a second floor above.
Floor Plan

Two full baths serve both secondary bedrooms and a walk-in closet anchors the right-side bedroom. The future bonus room adds 191 sq. ft. of flexible space above the garage, accessible from the landing without disrupting the main sleeping area.
Floor Plan
The main floor centers on a dining room and kitchen that sit side by side, keeping meal prep and gathering close. A walk-in closet off the stairwell is unusually large at 11×15-6. Mud room, wine storage, and pantry handle everyday clutter well. The front porch spans nearly 29 feet wide.
Herringbone Tile Fireplace Wall Anchors a Light-Filled Mountain View Living Room

Gray sofas arranged around a wood coffee table keep the layout casual but considered. Herringbone tile climbs the fireplace surround to the ceiling, framing a wall-mounted TV with real presence. Built-in shelving flanks both sides. Large sliding doors pull the snow-capped mountain view straight into the room.
In The Details: Herringbone tile running floor-to-ceiling on the fireplace wall is a move that earns its keep without needing much else around it. Paired with the concrete-look mantel shelf, it reads as modern farmhouse without leaning too hard on either style. The built-ins on either side keep the wall functional.
Rustic Wood Table Meets Modern Globe Chandelier in This Mountain-View Dining Room

Wainscoting wraps the lower walls in crisp white panels, while a multi-globe chandelier keeps the overhead feel current rather than traditional. Framed botanical prints and a view of snow-capped mountains do most of the decorating work.
Try This: Mixing a reclaimed-wood table with dark chairs and a modern light fixture is a reliable way to keep a dining room from feeling too matched. If your furniture is already coordinated, one unexpected pendant overhead can break the monotony without requiring a full refresh.
Dark Range Hood and Black Pendants Pull Focus in a White Farmhouse Kitchen

Pendant lights hung low over a marble-top island do a lot of work here. Paired with that charcoal range hood, the black hardware keeps white shaker cabinets from reading too sterile. Pink florals on the island add just enough warmth.
Why That Range Hood Color Works So Well
Painting or finishing a range hood in a contrasting tone is one of the oldest tricks for giving a white kitchen a focal point without adding upper cabinet clutter. Here, the charcoal hood reads almost furniture-like against the white surroundings. It also visually connects to the black pendants, so the contrast doesn’t feel random.
Vaulted Ceiling with Exposed Beams Turns a Bedroom into Something You Don’t Forget

Scissor trusses with wood beams and a ceiling fan centered at the peak give this bedroom serious vertical drama.
Budget Tip: Ceiling fans with a wood-finish blade set often cost less than decorative light fixtures but do more work year-round. Running the fan in reverse during winter pushes warm air back down from a vaulted ceiling, which can take real pressure off your heating bill. It’s one of the easier wins in a room with high ceilings.
Separate Vanities and a Walk-In Beyond the Door Make Sharing Easy

Warm wood cabinetry pairs with white marble countertops and matte black fixtures. Each vanity gets its own mirror and space. A walk-in closet opens just past the second sink.
Style Tip: Separate vanities with dedicated storage underneath each one solves more arguments than any design choice in a shared bathroom. If you’re planning a primary bath, putting even a few feet of space between sinks changes how two people move through a morning routine. Freestanding tubs like the one visible here tend to read as more spa-like than built-in versions, but they do require more floor space around them to avoid feeling cramped.
Wash & Dry Sign Says It All in a Laundry Room Built to Actually Work

Front-load washer and dryer sit flush under a quartz counter, giving you a folding surface right where you need it. Wood cabinetry overhead keeps supplies within reach without eating up the room. Subway tile runs wall to wall, and that black-and-white geometric floor pulls everything together without competing with anything else.
The Psychology Behind This: Laundry rooms get used every day, and research on household stress consistently ties chore friction to cluttered, poorly organized utility spaces. Giving this room a dedicated sink, ample counter space, and closed storage above reduces the mental load of the task itself. When a space looks finished, people are more likely to put things away rather than pile them up.
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On top, a craftsman cottage exterior shows cedar shingle siding, a covered front porch with tapered columns, and a dormer window above. Below, the first floor plan lays out 1,802 square feet with a primary suite, great room with 11-foot-6 ceilings, kitchen, dining, mud room, and both front and rear covered porches.
