
Empty nesters who have renovated before know the room that saves a floor plan is the one where everyone ends up standing — coffee going cold on a Sunday, a grandchild pulling books off a low shelf, your partner reading in the same room without it feeling like a negotiation. The Foxhollow is built around exactly that: a vaulted great room anchoring the open living zone, single-floor flow with no stairs to navigate, and a layout scaled for two without feeling like a retreat.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,582
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan – Main Floor

Three bedrooms, vaulted great room, split layout with master suite separated from secondary bedrooms.
Craftsman Curb Appeal With Stone Columns and French Doors Worth the Drive-By

Gray lap siding meets stone column bases and warm wood French doors in a combination that earns a second look from the street. Fresh mulch beds and layered plantings keep it grounded — present without being fussy about it.
Pendant Lights Over Dark Counters Pull This White Kitchen Off the Edge of Safe
Warm hardwood floors do a lot of work here, and the dark countertops earn their keep by grounding the white shaker cabinets instead of just floating next to them. Three pendants drop low enough over the island that they read as a deliberate choice rather than an afterthought.
In The Details: Those countertops read almost espresso against the white cabinetry, which saves the subway tile backsplash from feeling like a default. Above it all, the vaulted ceiling adds real volume to the kitchen without claiming any extra square footage — a meaningful distinction in a bungalow footprint.
Vaulted Ceiling, Fireplace, and Forest Views Do the Heavy Lifting Here

The brick surround fireplace anchors one end of the living room while floor-to-ceiling windows pull the pine forest in from the other. Cathedral ceilings give the whole thing room to breathe. That sectional and round dining table somehow coexist without crowding each other, which is harder to pull off than it looks on a plan this size.
Pro Tip: Vaulted great rooms lose heat fast in winter, and a ceiling fan with a reverse setting is one of those genuinely useful additions that tends to get skipped. Run it clockwise on low and it pushes warm air back down from the peak without creating a draft you can actually feel. A tall room that stays comfortable in January is a different thing entirely from one that just looks good in listing photos.
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Craftsman ranch exterior paired with a single-story floor plan showing three bedrooms and vaulted living spaces.
