
A slow morning does not need more house. It needs better access to the outside. Coffee cooling on a covered front porch, a second cup on the rear porch while the yard wakes up, the screen door you stop bothering to latch by mid-July. The Hampden Link is built around exactly that: dual porches facing opposite ends of the day, an open living and dining core that flows toward both of them, and a layout flat enough that bare feet never have to find stairs.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,541
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

Three bedrooms fan out from a central living room with a 15-foot vault, while the kitchen and dining share one open space up front. Dual porches, a two-car garage, and Bath 1 all sit within easy reach of Bedroom 1.
Navy Lap Siding and a Standing-Seam Roof That Earns Its Keep

Deep navy lap siding pairs with a dark metal roof built to handle decades of weather without complaint. Out front, white porch railings give the facade some relief, and there’s a side entry door with a wood-tone finish that quietly earns its place in the composition.
Vaulted Wood Ceiling Meets a Linear Fireplace Built for Slow Evenings
Shiplap surrounds a linear fireplace topped with a reclaimed wood mantel, and above all of it a cathedral ceiling clad in warm-toned planks pulls the eye upward in a way that actually justifies the vault. The gray sectional and chocolate leather ottoman keep things grounded. That pendant does a lot of work in a tall room — more than you’d expect.
Style Tip: Mixing a dark ottoman with a lighter sectional gives the seating area visual weight without locking you into a dark sofa you might regret in a few years. And if your ceiling is this high, hang pendant lights lower than feels natural. It draws the eye down and makes the space feel lived-in rather than like a hotel lobby.
Navy Shaker Cabinets and Butcher Block That Actually Work Harder Than They Look

Brass bar pulls against navy shaker doors hit differently than chrome would here — warmer, less sterile. Butcher block counters add a texture that painted surfaces simply can’t fake, and the farmhouse sink with subway tile backsplash keeps the whole kitchen grounded without feeling like it’s trying too hard to be charming.
Quick Fix: Butcher block looks rich, but it needs occasional oiling to stay that way. A food-safe mineral oil applied a few times a year prevents drying and cracking, especially near the sink where water exposure is constant. Five minutes of maintenance protects a feature most buyers notice the moment they walk in.
Black Chairs, Warm Wood, and a Pendant That Anchors the Whole Room

A butcher block tabletop sits beneath matte black dining chairs with just enough seat padding to be practical rather than precious. The industrial dome pendant pulls the eye down without overwhelming the space, and lantern centerpieces keep the table from feeling fussy.
Why That Rug Choice Matters More Than It Looks
Jute under a dining table is a genuinely smart call. Flat-woven enough that chair legs don’t snag every time someone pulls out a seat, and the natural fiber holds its own against wood tones without competing with them. Fair warning: it won’t hide stains as well as a patterned rug, so if the table sees serious daily use, placement is worth thinking about before you commit.
The bedroom pulls the same restrained palette through without losing any of the warmth built up in the living spaces.
Quilted Navy Headboard and Hardwood That Make the Case for Going Dark

Quilted navy upholstery on the headboard does the heavy lifting, anchoring the room without needing much help from anything else. Warm hardwood planks run underfoot, a globe pendant keeps the overhead light from feeling institutional, and somehow the whole thing lands without trying too hard. Rooms like this are harder to pull off than they look.
Gold Fixtures and Wood Cabinetry That Know Exactly What They’re Doing

Marble countertops with visible veining anchor the double vanity, and warm wood cabinetry keeps the palette from going cold. Wall sconces with white shades flank each gold-framed mirror. Over in the shower stall, hexagonal tile adds texture quietly — the kind of detail you clock after you’ve been in the room a few minutes, not the moment you walk in.
By The Numbers: Marble is porous and etches easily from acidic products — toothpaste and some everyday cleansers included. Sealing it once or twice a year keeps that veining looking clean rather than cloudy over time.
Sage Cabinets and a Gold Faucet Doing the Heavy Lifting in a Compact Laundry Room

Soft sage shaker cabinets pair with a stone countertop that wraps the sink and runs over the washer below — a small move that recovers a lot of usable surface. Gold brackets anchor open shelving on the back wall, keeping folded linens and pantry jars within reach without adding bulk.
Worth Knowing: A front-load washer tucked under a countertop turns a compact laundry room into an actual folding station. Just confirm the cabinet opening is built to the machine’s exact depth before installation — not after you’ve already tiled the floor around it.
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The exterior rendering shows a modern farmhouse with navy lap siding, a metal roof, and a red front door flanked by a covered porch. Below it, the floor plan lays out three bedrooms, dual porches, a vaulted living room, and an attached two-car garage spread across 69 feet of width.
