
The house everyone wants to visit is rarely the biggest one on the street — it’s the one where the garage door is always open, the island always has people leaning against it, and the driveway fits every car that shows up unannounced. The Crestfield is built around exactly that: a three-car garage that doubles as a staging zone, an open main floor that keeps the cook in the conversation, and a layout that moves a full family through a Friday night without a single bottleneck.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 3,975
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 4.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

First floor shows open living and dining off a front porch, kitchen with island, Bedroom 2 with bath, office, utility, and a three-car garage wing.
Floor Plan – Second Floor

The primary bedroom sits in the far right corner of the upper level, with its own bath and a walk-in closet. Two secondary bedrooms mirror each other across the hall, each with a W.I.C. and bath access. A central stairwell keeps traffic moving cleanly between floors, and the three-car garage below anchors the left side with real square footage to spare.
Low-Slung Sectional, Raw Wood Table, and a Backyard That Earns Its Keep
Warm greige walls and a vaulted ceiling pull the eye straight toward floor-to-ceiling sliding doors and the green lawn beyond. That live-edge coffee table does real work anchoring the space, and two armchairs with olive cushions bridge the living and dining zones without making a fuss about the transition.
Material Matters: That live-edge coffee table is likely slab-cut from a single trunk, left with its natural outer profile rather than squared off at the mill. The raw grain absorbs oils and builds patina over years of use, which means it actually looks better a decade from now than it does on delivery day. Pair it with a natural fiber rug like the one shown here and the organic material story holds all the way to the floor.
Bold Red Refrigerator, Rattan Pendants, and Yellow Walls That Actually Work

Yellow walls could easily go wrong. This kitchen avoids it because the tone reads honey rather than lemon, warm enough to feel intentional without veering into a preschool. The red refrigerator is the real conversation starter. Three rattan pendants hang over the island where black-framed bar stools line up without crowding, and light oak floors keep the whole palette from tipping too heavy.
Common Mistake: Painting kitchen walls a saturated color while keeping upper cabinets white is a reasonable workaround, but homeowners often skip testing the wall color under artificial evening light. Yellow shades in particular can shift toward green or brown once daylight is gone, so swatch the wall and live with it after dark before you commit to a full room.
Channeled Headboard, Blue Walls, and Pendant Lights Worth Stealing

Slate-blue walls and a tall channeled headboard create enough contrast to hold your attention. The geometric art above the bed does the rest without overplaying it.
Quick Fix: Pendant lights hung from ceiling hooks rather than hardwired sconces let you reposition them as the room changes over time. If your ceiling fan is already centered, consider offsetting the pendants closer to the nightstands so they read as task lighting rather than decoration.
Board-and-Batten Exterior, Stone Base, and a Covered Rear Porch Built for Evening Use

Vertical board-and-batten siding keeps the exterior clean without demanding much maintenance, and stone veneer along the base adds visual weight exactly where the facade needs it. Large sliding doors blur the indoor-outdoor line. The covered columns do what covered columns always do — make you want to pull up a chair and stay.
- Stone veneer at the foundation breaks up an all-white exterior without requiring contrasting paint colors
- Covered rear porches face away from street traffic, which makes them far more usable than front porches for daily living
- Wide sliding glass panels pull more natural light into back-facing rooms than fixed windows of the same width
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Exterior rendering shows a two-story contemporary transitional with board-and-batten siding, stone cladding, and an attached three-car garage. The first-floor plan below reveals an open living and dining area, main-floor bedroom, kitchen with island, and dual porches.
