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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,295
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan

In order to come up with the very specific design ideas, we create most designs with the assistance of state-of-the-art AI interior design software.
The first floor covers 1,091 square feet with an open kitchen, dining, and family room across the back. A front office, foyer, and half bath sit near the entry. The 2-car garage connects through a pantry and mechanical room. Stairs lead both up and down.
Floor Plan

Second-floor layout covers 1,204 square feet across three bedrooms, a loft, two bathrooms, and a walk-in closet. Primary suite sits privately on one side with its own bath and 9×9 WIC. Two secondary bedrooms share a full bath near the staircase. A 12×16-foot loft adds flexible living space at the front.
Warm Wood Desk and Leather Chair Define a Home Office With Rural Views
Weathered wood desk, gray leather armchair, arc floor lamp, and floating shelves anchor a neutral home office overlooking open fields.
Why It Works: Floating shelves keep wall space active without crowding the room. Decorative objects like the globe and woven spheres add texture while staying within a restrained color palette. Natural light from the triple window does the heavy lifting that most fixtures cannot.
Stone Fireplace and Countryside Views Make This Living Room Hard to Leave

Stacked stone runs floor to ceiling around a gas fireplace with a wood mantel. Neutral linen sofas and a glass coffee table anchor the space. Light hardwood floors and large windows frame open meadows beyond.
Why a Floor-to-Ceiling Stone Surround Works
Carrying stone all the way to the ceiling draws the eye upward and gives the fireplace visual weight that balances a large room. Stopping the stone at mantel height would shrink the feature and make it compete with the mounted television rather than anchor both. Rough-cut natural stone also absorbs and reflects firelight in ways that manufactured panels simply cannot replicate.
Candle Chandelier and Dark Wood Dining Set Anchor an Open Kitchen and Dining Space

Wrought iron chandeliers hang above a dark wood dining table with upholstered chairs. White shaker cabinets, herringbone tile backsplash, and a gray island extend into the connected kitchen beyond.
Editor’s Note: Open-concept layouts like this one work best when the dining and kitchen zones share a consistent wood tone. Here, the dark table echoes the island base, giving both spaces a sense of visual connection without requiring identical finishes throughout.
Quartz Island and Dark Base Cabinet Bring Contrast to a White Kitchen

Gray upholstered barstools pull up to a dark island topped with white quartz, carrying thin veining. White shaker cabinets line the perimeter, paired with a herringbone tile backsplash. Stainless steel appliances include a gas range, double-wall ovens, and a French door refrigerator. Iron candle-style chandeliers hang overhead on light hardwood floors.
Pro Tip: Quartz countertops mimic the look of marble without the maintenance demands. Pairing a dark island base with a white quartz top adds visual weight to the center of the kitchen without relying on color throughout the whole space. Matte or satin finishes on cabinet hardware tend to hold up better in high-use kitchens than polished chrome.
Loft Media Space Balances Open Staircase Rail With Wall-Mounted TV

Beige carpet, taupe walls, low media console, and gray sectional define an upper-level loft.
Low media console, gray sectional, and taupe walls define an upper-level loft.
Dark Upholstered Bed and Matching Nightstands Ground a Neutral Primary Suite

Dark leather frames the bed against warm taupe walls. Matching round nightstands hold white ceramic lamps with globe bases. Pillows layer from full shams to lumbar accents in charcoal and silver. Carpet runs wall to wall in a soft cream tone. An en suite bathroom door sits open to the left.
- Recessed ceiling lights reduce the need for overhead fixtures that compete with bedside lamps
- Round nightstands work better in tight bedroom corners than rectangular alternatives
- Monochromatic bedding in varied textures adds depth without introducing extra color
Marble Vanity and Glass-Enclosed Tub Bring Calm to a Primary Bathroom

White quartz veining runs across the double vanity counter. Wall sconces cast warm light against taupe walls. Large-format tile lines the tub surround, accented by a mosaic border strip.
The Psychology Behind This: Separating the toilet into its own water closet is a practical move that also reduces conflict in shared bathrooms. Studies on household stress consistently point to bathroom access as a friction point, and even a partial visual separation helps people feel the space is their own.
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Exterior photo shows a Craftsman home with a covered porch and two-car garage. The first floor plan below details 1,091 square feet with kitchen, family room, office, and dining.
Trend Alert: Craftsman-style homes have seen a steady rise in new construction over the past decade, largely because buyers respond to their covered porches and defined rooflines. Unlike open contemporary facades, Craftsman exteriors use layered trim and mixed cladding to create depth without added square footage. That visual weight reads well on narrower lots where a flat front would feel plain.
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