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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,224
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 3
Floor Plan

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The first floor puts the primary suite and guest room on opposite ends, giving both solid privacy. A central great room connects to the kitchen and dining without walls getting in the way. The mud room drops you right in from the garage. Upstairs access sits near the foyer. At 1,430 square feet, it’s compact but well-organized.
Floor Plan

Upper floor holds two equal 11×11 bedrooms sharing a full bath with WIC, plus an open loft for casual living.
Stone Fireplace Wall Anchors a Gray and Black Living Room
Floor-to-ceiling stone surround with a wood mantel shelf draws the eye, while gray upholstery and a black glass coffee table keep things grounded.
Black Island Base and White Quartz Create a High-Contrast Kitchen Worth Studying

Painted black cabinetry on the island anchors a kitchen that otherwise runs entirely white. The quartz countertop carries visible veining without feeling busy. Three lantern pendants hang at staggered heights above the island, where four white barstools line up cleanly. Herringbone tile backsplash behind the range adds a quiet texture. That contrast between island and perimeter cabinets does a lot of work here.
In The Details: Black hardware on white cabinets is a small detail that reads clearly from across the room. Cabinet pulls and hinges match the island base and pendant frames, so nothing competes for attention. It’s a restraint that’s harder to pull off than it looks.
Dark Upholstery and Soft Gray Walls Make This Bedroom Feel Grounded

Black platform bed with a curved headboard anchors the room without overwhelming it. Three botanical prints hung low above the headboard keep the eye at bed level. Natural light from the wide picture window pulls the green landscape right into the space.
Three botanical prints hung low above the headboard keep the eye at bed level.
Marble Surround and Dark Shelving Give This Master Bath Serious Weight

Soaking tub set into a marble platform, dark wood bath caddy holding tulips, and floating shelves above add warmth against all that white stone.
Why the Marble Surround Works Harder Than It Looks
Wrapping the tub platform in the same marble tile used on the floor and wall creates a cohesive visual mass rather than a tub that floats awkwardly in the space. It’s a detail that takes more material and more cutting, but it earns its keep by making the tub feel like it was built into the room rather than dropped in. That continuity is what separates a remodel that photographs well from one that actually feels finished.
Laundry Room Shelving and Art Frames Turn Chores Into Something Cheerful

Floating shelves above front-load machines hold towels, plants, and small containers within easy reach.
Quick Fix: Open shelving above a washer and dryer only works if you’re committed to keeping it tidy. Lidded containers and rolled towels pull their weight here because they look intentional even when things aren’t perfectly organized. If you’ve got the wall space, two shelves beat one deep shelf every time.
Recessed Lighting and Neutral Upholstery Keep a Basement Lounge Feeling Like the Main Floor

Cream armchairs and a low black coffee table anchor the seating area without competing. Carpet keeps it quiet underfoot. Two separate conversation zones share the space without crowding each other.
Common Mistake: Positioning your TV wall opposite a staircase opening is a common oversight. Sound travels up stairs easily, so what feels like background noise in the basement becomes disruptive on the floor above. If the layout allows, place the media wall on an interior wall away from the stair opening.
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Craftsman curb appeal leads the top half, with cedar shake accents, a covered front porch, and a two-car garage tucked to the side. Below, the first floor plan shows 1,430 square feet organized around a central great room, with a primary suite, guest room, kitchen, mudroom, and rear porch all on one level.
By The Numbers: At 58 feet deep and 50 feet wide, this footprint fits a surprising amount of program without going vertical. Most of the daily living, including the primary suite, happens entirely on the first floor, which reduces stair traffic for households planning to age in place.
