
Most “farmhouse cottage” plans are just small houses with shiplap. The Clover Nook actually earns the name, with a balcony loft where Saturday morning coffee happens in robes, a kitchen sized for two people who cook together, a front porch built for wine at dusk, and a floor plan compact enough that the whole place feels like somewhere you checked into on purpose.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 850
- Bedrooms: 1-2
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan – Main Floor

The first floor opens into a combined living area and ADA kitchen, with a bedroom and full ADA bath along the back and a covered entry leading to the central staircase that connects up to the loft.
Floor Plan – Second Floor

Upstairs, the loft opens over the void below, with the staircase landing on one side and a full bath tucked to the right. Two attic storage areas reclaim the dead space along the eaves — not glamorous, but smart use of a footprint this size.
Floor Plan – Unfinished Basement
The basement runs 21′-0″ x 21′-2″ as one unfinished open room, ready for whatever comes next. Stairs with a quarter-turn landing lead up to the main level, and a small utility or mechanical room sits tucked in the upper right corner. Otherwise, no interior walls break up the space — just a blank slate for a future owner to work with.
Why It Works: Leaving the basement unfinished keeps upfront costs down while preserving real flexibility for a home office, gym, or extra bedroom later. For a couple who expects their needs to shift over time, that open canvas is worth more than a pre-finished space that already made every decision for them.
Green-Painted Deck Stairs and a Blooming Magnolia Make the Exterior Feel Like a Retreat

Vertical white board-and-batten siding and a standing-seam metal roof give this two-story cottage its clean, modern farmhouse look, with skylights just visible above the roofline. The green-painted deck stairs are a small detail, but they do a lot of work against all that white.
Trend Alert: Metal roofing has made a quiet comeback in residential design, especially on cottages and farmhouses. It handles snow load and rain far better than asphalt shingles and tends to outlast them by decades — so while it costs more upfront, couples planning to stay long-term usually come out ahead.
Double-Height Ceilings and a Loft Railing Give This Living Room Its Best Feature

The open-plan living area flows straight into the kitchen, anchored by warm wood tones on the loft railing and the console table below. That fiddle-leaf fig earns its spot in the corner.
Why the Loft Railing Works So Hard Here
Wood balusters with painted white spindles are a farmhouse classic, but the real job of that railing is visual: it pulls the eye upward and makes the double-height wall feel deliberate rather than just tall. Matching the wood stain on the railing cap to the console table one floor below ties both levels together without requiring anything extra. Simple, and it works.
Vaulted Ceilings and Wraparound Windows Pull the Treeline Right Into the Room

Warm hardwood floors and cream walls stay out of the way so the view can do the heavy lifting. A potted areca palm in the corner echoes the greenery just outside the glass, and the vaulted ceiling gives a room this compact some genuine breathing room.
Try This: If you’re mounting a TV on the wall, align it with the height of nearby windows so your eye doesn’t have to jump between two competing focal points. A dark console table underneath helps ground it visually instead of leaving it floating on a blank wall.
Cast Iron on the Cooktop and Views of the Hills Make This Kitchen Worth Cooking In

A gas cooktop sits flush in a white quartz island with a cast iron dutch oven already in use, a blender and coffee maker holding their ground near the sink, and wooded hills filling both windows beyond. It’s sized for two people who actually cook, not two people who reheat.
Purple Bedding Against Dark Wood Furniture Gives This Primary Bedroom Real Personality

Built-in shelving flanks a double clothing rod on each side, giving couples their own dedicated hanging space without sacrificing square footage to a separate walk-in. The sleigh bed’s dark walnut finish grounds the purple bedding in a way that feels intentional rather than accidental.
Stacked Washer-Dryer Next to a Hanging Rod Makes This Laundry Nook Genuinely Useful

Labeled jars on the shelf keep detergent and stain remover close without cluttering the counter, and being able to hang freshly laundered shirts directly in the same nook cuts out an entire step. Small nook, zero wasted moves.
Loft Office with a Skylight and a View of the Trees Earns Its Keep

Sloped ceilings and a skylight overhead keep this loft from feeling like an afterthought, which is a real risk with spaces this size. The wood desk has built-in shelving below that handles books and binders without requiring a separate bookcase, and a pair of white lounge chairs face the window with green trees just outside. It’s a room doing two jobs at once, and it doesn’t look strained doing either of them.
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A rendered exterior view pairs with the first-floor plan of this two-story farmhouse cottage, showing a living room, ADA kitchen, bedroom, and full bath on the main level, with stairs leading to the loft above. Outside, board-and-batten siding and a covered front entry finish the look.
