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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,295
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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First floor shows open kitchen and dining flowing into a family room, plus a front office, foyer, and two-car garage.
Floor Plan

The upper level holds three bedrooms, a loft, two full baths, and a walk-in closet. The primary suite sits apart from the secondary bedrooms. A covered front porch and two-car garage complete the layout.
Wraparound Views and Warm Wood Make This Home Office Hard to Leave
Leather armchair, arc floor lamp, and a rustic wood desk face triple windows overlooking open fields.
Stone Fireplace, Open Fields, and a Room That Actually Feels Like Home

Floor-to-ceiling stone carries the fireplace wall straight up to the ceiling, anchoring the room without overwhelming it. Cream upholstery keeps the seating arrangement light against warm wood floors. That glass coffee table does real work here, letting the patterned rug breathe beneath it. Outside, open meadow and tree-covered hills roll right to the window glass.
Material Matters: The dry-stacked stone surround running floor to ceiling is a load-bearing visual choice that doesn’t need a mantel to justify itself, though the reclaimed wood shelf adds a practical ledge for candles and greenery. Stone holds heat longer than brick, making it a smart material pairing with an insert fireplace. It also ages without refinishing.
Dark Island Base, White Quartz Top, and a Kitchen That Knows What It’s Doing

Quartz countertop with natural veining sits on a charcoal island. Gray upholstered barstools and a herringbone tile backsplash ground the contrast nicely.
Worth Knowing: Quartz countertops mimic the look of marble without the porosity that makes natural stone prone to staining from everyday kitchen use. The dark island base is a practical choice too since it won’t show scuffs the way white cabinetry does at knee height. Pairing the two finishes keeps the kitchen from reading as all one tone, which can flatten a space.
Candle-Style Chandelier, Dark Wood Dining Set, Open Kitchen Beyond

Wrought iron chandeliers with taper candles anchor the dining room, while the kitchen’s white cabinetry and range hood stay visible behind.
Wrought iron chandeliers with taper candles anchor the dining room, while the kitchen’s white cabinetry and range hood stay visible behind.
Loft Living Done Right, With a Wall-Mounted TV and Room to Breathe

Greige walls keep the palette quiet while the low-profile media console does the heavy lifting. Black metal balusters on the stair railing add just enough contrast without competing with the TV wall. Two framed black-and-white prints flank the screen, anchoring the arrangement without fuss. Plenty of open carpet gives the space room to function.
Why It Works: Mounting the TV flush to the wall and running the media console low keeps sightlines clear across the loft, which matters when the space is open to the staircase below. Recessed cans handle ambient light without crowding the ceiling. It’s a layout that earns its square footage.
Soft Light, Gray Linen, and a Bedroom That Earns Its Quiet

Warm recessed lighting works with the taupe walls to keep the room from reading cold despite the dark upholstered bed frame. Gray linen bedding does the heavy lifting here. Two black nightstands anchor each side without matching exactly.
- Carpet in a neutral tone softens sound better than hard flooring in a bedroom
- Recessed lighting on a dimmer gives you flexibility from morning to late night
- Dark upholstered headboards don’t show wear the way fabric panels do
Marble Counters, Glass Shower, and a Bathroom Built for Two

White cabinetry paired with marble countertops sets a clean foundation, but the real decision is the combo tub-shower with a glass panel and rain head mounted directly to tiled walls. Gray large-format tile keeps the surround grounded. Sconce lighting flanking the mirror adds warmth without competing.
In The Details: Combining the tub and shower into a single wet zone is a practical call in a shared bathroom, since it preserves floor space without sacrificing either function. A glass panel instead of a full enclosure keeps the layout from feeling boxed in, which matters in a room that’s long but not especially wide.
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Craftsman exterior with board-and-batten siding pairs with a first-floor plan showing an open kitchen, family room, office, and covered front porch.
