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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 4,601
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

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The main floor centers on an open dining and great room with two-story ceilings. The master bedroom sits at the rear with covered patio access. A mud room, pantry, and breakfast nook support the kitchen. Three covered patios wrap the perimeter.
Floor Plan

Upper level shows master bedroom, three secondary bedrooms, a loft, a suite, and multiple covered patios with an open-below stairwell.
Arched Windows and a Dark Fireplace Anchor This Coastal Living Room
White bouclé chairs, rattan sofa, travertine coffee table, exposed wood beams, and arched windows define this coastal space.
Worth Knowing: Arched windows like these draw from Spanish Colonial Revival architecture, common in coastal California homes built in the 1920s. Pairing that architectural detail with natural rattan and travertine grounds the room in texture rather than color. White walls let the materials do the work without competing for attention.
Woven Pendants and Marble Countertops Define This Coastal Kitchen

Tiered rattan pendants hang over a marble waterfall island. White shaker cabinets, brass hardware, a wine rack, and a fluted wood island base complete the coastal palette.
Style Math: Rattan and marble sit at opposite ends of the material spectrum, one raw and organic, the other polished and cool. Pairing them works because both read as natural rather than manufactured. Coastal kitchens lean on this contrast to keep white-heavy spaces from feeling sterile.
Built-In Banquette Nook Framed by an Arched Passageway

Vertical shiplap lines the walls of this breakfast nook. Fluted pedestal table pairs with bench seating upholstered in natural linen. A drum pendant with smoked glass hangs overhead, anchoring the compact dining space.
History Corner: Built-in banquette seating dates to early American taverns and colonial-era homes, where fixed benches maximized limited floor space. By the mid-20th century, breakfast nooks with built-in seating had become a hallmark of California bungalow design, blending practicality with a relaxed, informal way of dining at home.
Woven Pendants and a Long Wood Table Ground This Open Dining Space

Light oak chairs with taupe upholstered backs surround a cerused wood dining table. A dark ceramic vase holds eucalyptus branches. Rattan drum pendants hang over the kitchen island beyond, while arched doorways with periwinkle-painted trim connect adjacent rooms.
Arched doorways with periwinkle-painted trim connect adjacent rooms.
Barrel Vault Ceiling and Arched Fireplace Shape a Coastal Primary Bedroom

Soft greige tones, linen bedding, and wide-plank floors anchor the room. A plastered fireplace with an arched opening faces the upholstered bed.
Trend Alert: Barrel vault ceilings originated in Roman architecture and later became a defining feature of Mediterranean Revival homes popular along the California and Florida coasts. Pairing one with a plastered arched fireplace reinforces a cohesive structural language throughout the room. Both elements draw the eye upward without relying on decoration to do it.
Dual Rain Heads and Brushed Bronze Hardware Fill a Glass-Enclosed Shower

Two rain heads, dual hand showers, and bronze fixtures anchor this double shower with stacked rectangular tile.
Double Shower Systems and How They’re Plumbed
Running two independent shower systems requires a thermostatic valve with multiple outputs rather than a standard pressure-balance unit. These valves allow each user to control water flow independently while maintaining a shared temperature. Contractors typically rough in larger supply lines, often three-quarter inch instead of half-inch, to handle the added demand without pressure drops.
Covered Patio Dining Area Opens to a Pool Terrace Beyond

Rope-wrapped chairs surround a wood dining table set on a woven rug beneath a wood-planked ceiling. Recessed lighting supplements natural daylight. A lantern centerpiece anchors the table. French doors connect to the interior, while an arched fireplace sits at the right wall. Open columns frame views toward the pool terrace.
Material Matters: Rope furniture construction, often called cord weaving or loom weaving, uses synthetic or natural fiber wrapped tightly around aluminum frames. The technique resists moisture and UV exposure better than solid wood in coastal climates, making it a practical choice for covered outdoor dining spaces that see year-round use.
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Exterior rendering shows a coastal contemporary facade paired with a detailed first-floor plan below.
