
Anyone who has teenagers knows the moment the family room stops being shared and starts being negotiated — who has the TV, who needs quiet for homework, who has friends over on a Friday night. The Danebury Court is built around exactly that: a finished walkout basement that gives teenagers their own wing, a craftsman main floor where dinner still happens together, a three-car garage that absorbs the bikes and boards and everything else, and enough separation that everyone actually wants to come home.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,648
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

The main floor spans 2,648 sq ft, organizing a central great room, master suite off the right wing, three bedrooms, mud room, and covered deck around a two-car garage anchoring the front-right corner.
Floor Plan

Down below: two bedrooms, a shared bath, a gym, a recreation area, and unfinished storage that will inevitably become something else within a year.
Crystal Chandelier Anchors an Open Living Space Built for Gathering
Tufted wingback chairs with nailhead trim face a reclaimed wood coffee table, and floral drapes pull in rust and green just enough to give the room some color without competing with the neutral upholstery.
Tufted wingback chairs with nailhead trim face a reclaimed wood coffee table.
Shiplap, Stone, and Crystal Walk Into the Same Room and It Works

Horizontal shiplap wraps the fireplace surround all the way to the ceiling, grounding the space, while a crystal drum chandelier pulls it somewhere you wouldn’t expect. Candle pedestals on the console add warmth without trying too hard.
Style Math: Rustic shiplap paired with a crystal chandelier sounds like it shouldn’t survive contact with reality, but the stone fireplace does the bridging work — rough-edged enough to keep the chandelier from feeling precious. Wood tones in the console and coffee table carry that through the rest of the room.
Dark Cabinetry and a Marble Island That Earns Every Inch of Counter Space

Knotty alder cabinets in a deep walnut stain anchor the kitchen without feeling heavy, largely because a cream brick backsplash bounces enough light around to keep things from closing in. Two pendant lamps with fabric shades warm the space above the island. That slab is doing serious work.
Designer’s Secret: Pendant lights with fabric shades soften the contrast between dark cabinetry and light walls far better than metal shades would. If you’re drawn to rustic materials, warm-toned textiles do more heavy lifting than most people expect.
Ornate Carved Headboard Sets the Tone Before You Notice Anything Else

Orange bedding in a neutral room shouldn’t work this well, but it does.
The carved gray headboard grabs your attention immediately — its arched relief detail pulling more visual weight than four framed prints ever could. Brass globe pendants hang on either side without matching the headboard’s finish, and that slight mismatch is exactly what keeps the whole thing from feeling like a showroom. Small ottomans at the foot of the bed are a practical call you’ll appreciate every single morning.
Freestanding Tub Centered Under a Drum Pendant That Actually Fits the Space

Gray-stained cabinetry with nickel hardware runs the full length of one wall, topped with a vessel sink sitting well above the counter. Across the room, a rectangular soaking tub sits directly beneath a drum pendant, with white curtains trimmed in rust framing the window without blocking the view.
Try This: Freestanding tubs with floor-mounted faucets look sharp but require rough-in plumbing placed precisely before tile goes down. Lock in the tub placement before any subfloor work starts — moving that supply line later costs far more than the tub itself.
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The exterior shows a Craftsman home with stone veneer and board-and-batten siding. Below it, the 2,648 sq ft main floor plan lays out three bedrooms, a great room, master suite, and two-car garage.
