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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,874
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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First floor shows open family room and kitchen flow, with a 2-car garage, mudroom, pantry, and foyer across 26 feet wide.
Floor Plan

Four bedrooms share the upper level, with the primary suite tucked at the front alongside a walk-in closet and private bath. Three secondary bedrooms cluster around a shared hall bath, with linen storage near the stair landing.
Warm Entry Hallway with Geometric Pendant and Reclaimed Wood Console
Geometric black iron pendant anchors the entry. Warm wood floors and a distressed console table with woven basket storage set a relaxed, grounded tone.
Stone Fireplace Tower Anchors a Living Room Built for the Long View

Floor-to-ceiling stacked stone gives the fireplace real weight, and the wood mantel keeps it from feeling too formal. Gray sectional, a vintage-style rug, and that dark console table create contrast without competing. Rolling countryside visible through every window does the rest.
Budget Tip: Stone fireplace surrounds look like a major splurge, but manufactured stone veneer runs significantly less than natural cut stone and installs over standard drywall. Saving there frees up budget for the wood mantel, which draws the eye and adds warmth without requiring a mason.
Navy Island Base and Iron Lanterns Give This Kitchen Real Backbone

Three orb-style pendants hang low over a navy island topped with white quartz. The herringbone tile backsplash draws the eye toward the range wall without competing with the cabinetry hardware.
Fun Fact: Herringbone backsplash patterns cost more to install than straight-set tile because the angled cuts generate more waste and take longer to lay. Budgeting for extra tile helps avoid shortages mid-project.
Marble Countertop Over the Washer and Dryer Makes Laundry Feel Less Like a Chore

White shaker cabinets, subway tile backsplash, and a marble-topped washer-dryer pair sit beside an open pocket door to the kitchen.
Did You Know: Front-load washers and dryers allow you to use the top surface as a folding station, which is exactly what’s happening here with that slab of marble. It’s a practical upgrade that earns its keep in a small laundry room where counter space is already limited. Pocket doors are worth considering too since they disappear into the wall and don’t eat into the usable floor area the way a hinged door would.
Moving back to the main living areas, the open-plan layout pulls everything together.
Rustic Dining Table and Navy Island Keep an Open Floor Plan Grounded

Open-concept rooms can feel unmoored without something to anchor each zone. Here, a reclaimed wood dining table does that job well. The iron candelabra chandelier overhead reads as intentional, not a decorative afterthought. Behind it, the navy kitchen island carries enough visual weight to hold its own across the space.
Dark Leather Platform Bed and Recessed Lighting Pull a Master Suite Into Focus

Carpet underfoot, a low-profile bed, and an en suite bathroom visible through the doorway make this room feel genuinely restful.
Carpet underfoot, a low-profile bed, and an en suite bathroom visible through the doorway make this room feel genuinely restful.
Brass Fixtures and Marble Counters Make a Narrow Bathroom Work Hard

Double-sink vanity with quartz countertop pairs with rain-head shower and brushed brass hardware throughout.
Editor’s Note: Quartz and quartzite are often confused at the showroom, but they’re very different materials. Quartz is engineered from crushed stone and resin, making it more resistant to staining than natural quartzite, which needs periodic sealing. For a busy bathroom with two sinks, quartz is usually the smarter call.
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Exterior photo shows a two-story Craftsman home with dark gray siding, white trim, and a two-car garage. The first-floor plan below reveals a family room, open kitchen, dining area, mud room, and foyer across a 26-by-52-foot footprint.
Pro Tip: Narrow lots under 30 feet wide push garages to the front, which means the entry foyer needs extra attention to make it feel welcoming rather than like an afterthought. A 9-foot ceiling in the foyer, as shown here, does a lot of that work without requiring any additional square footage.
