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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,522
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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The first floor arranges kitchen, dining, and family rooms in an open layout, with laundry, pantry, powder room, and hall tucked toward the rear stairwell.
Floor Plan

Second-floor layout includes a primary bedroom with vaulted ceilings, two additional bedrooms, and a hall connecting all spaces. Two full bathrooms serve the upper level, with a closet shared near the primary suite. A staircase with a dedicated landing provides access down. Ceiling heights reach 8 feet throughout, except where rafters follow the pitch above the primary bedroom.
Elevated Rear Deck Brings Outdoor Living to a New Level
Pressure-treated lumber frames a raised deck with vertical baluster railings and a staircase angled toward the lawn. Wall-mounted lanterns flank a glass-panel door at the main entry. Below the deck, support posts cast hard shadows across clipped green grass.
Warm Neutrals and Panel Molding Define a Welcoming Entry and Living Space

Shiplap-style panel molding wraps the walls in soft greige tones. Gold sconce fixtures flank a leaning mirror above a natural wood console. A sectional sofa anchors the living area near a glazed front door, while dark hardwood floors ground the entire open space.
Common Mistake: Placing a large sectional sofa this close to the front entry can make the space feel cramped when multiple people arrive at once. A narrow bench or pair of chairs near the door gives guests a clear landing zone without blocking traffic flow into the living room.
Brass Sconces and Panel Molding Give a Living Room Its Quiet Character

Wainscot-style panel molding covers every wall in crisp white. Two brass sconces flank a wall-mounted flat-screen TV above a light oak media cabinet. Linen sofas and a wood coffee table anchor the neutral palette. A patterned rug adds texture underfoot without breaking the calm.
Designer’s Secret: Gold-toned brass fixtures have largely replaced chrome and nickel in casual living spaces because warm metals hold their visual weight against soft white walls without feeling cold. Pairing brass sconces at the same height as the TV’s bottom edge draws the eye across the wall rather than straight up to the screen, keeping the room balanced.
White Cabinetry and Warm Wood Floors Anchor a Kitchen Built for Daily Life

Shaker cabinets in soft white run the perimeter, paired with brass hardware and under-cabinet lighting. A quartz island seats three on upholstered counter stools. Two pendant lights with white drum shades hang from brass chains. Wide-plank oak flooring ties the space to a natural warmth that white surfaces alone could not provide.
Color Story: White and warm wood is one of the most durable color pairings in kitchen design because neither element trends sharply in any direction. The brass hardware reads as an accent rather than a statement, keeping the palette from feeling flat. Soft white walls reflect light without pushing the room into cold, clinical territory.
Vaulted Ceiling and Panel Molding Give This Primary Bedroom a Quiet Authority

Board-and-batten molding wraps the headboard wall, floor to ceiling, anchoring the bed without a single piece of art. Hardwood floors run beneath two-layered rugs in muted gray and tan. A rattan nightstand adds texture against all the white. Knit throws and linen pillows keep the palette grounded in natural materials rather than color.
Worth Knowing: Vaulted ceilings in bedrooms create a sense of volume without requiring additional square footage. Because sound travels differently in angled spaces, rooms like this often feel quieter than their flat-ceiling counterparts. Pairing that height with soft textiles helps prevent the space from feeling cold or echo-prone.
Fresh Lumber and Open Sky Make This Rear Deck Worth Every Morning

Natural pressure-treated decking runs the full width of the home. Vertical balusters cast grid shadows across bare wood. Red clay soil and bare trees signal early spring beyond the railing.
- Bare wood decking should be sealed within 60 days of installation to prevent moisture absorption and surface cracking
- Spacing balusters no more than 4 inches apart meets most residential building codes for elevated decks
- Orienting a deck toward a wooded lot provides natural afternoon shade without requiring an overhead structure
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Outside, a white farmhouse exterior with a covered front porch sits against a backdrop of bare trees. Below, the first-floor plan reveals a 27-by-32-foot layout with a family room, open kitchen and dining area, laundry, powder room, and both a covered front deck and open rear deck.
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