
Every architect knows the feature self-made clients request last and regret skipping most: a dedicated space that belongs entirely to them — Saturday night with the projector running and the sound sealed in, coffee at the kitchen island before anyone else is awake, work calls taken in a room with a door that actually closes, the loft above it all where the next project gets planned. The Haydon Street is built around exactly that: a theater room, an open farmhouse kitchen, a private home office, and a loft that earns its square footage every single week.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 4,054
- Bedrooms: 5
- Bathrooms: 4.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

The main floor opens into a kitchen, dining, and living room stretch that runs the full depth of the house, with a covered patio sitting just off the dining area. Bedroom 2 and a full bath anchor the left side, while an office, foyer, and mud room with lockers handle the entry zone. Two separate two-car garages flank the left wing.
Floor Plan – Second Floor

Upper level holds a master suite with oversized WIC, four additional bedrooms, two shared baths, loft, and laundry room.
By The Numbers: Five bedrooms share this upper floor alongside two full baths and a laundry room, putting everything families use daily in one place. The master WIC runs close to 15 by 7 feet — generous enough to function more like a dressing room than a closet. Beds 3, 4, and 5 all land near 11 by 13 feet, so nobody draws the short straw on room size.
Floor Plan – Basement
Basement level includes a theater room, exercise room, wet bar, steam rooms, bath, and mechanical storage, with stair access connecting to floors above.
Dark Doors and Brass Hardware Set the Tone Before You’re Even Inside

A Craftsman-style front door in near-black stain pairs with brass lever hardware, and flanking olive branches in ceramic urns keep the whole entry grounded without tipping into formal.
Editor’s Note: Dark interior doors have made a real comeback in farmhouse and traditional homes because they add definition without requiring pattern or texture to do the heavy lifting. Staining or painting doors in deep walnut or espresso is one of the more affordable ways to shift a foyer’s entire character. It works especially well when the hardware stays warm, as it does here with the brushed brass levers.
Coffered Ceiling and Stone Fireplace Pull This Great Room Together

Warm wood wall paneling flanks a dark stone fireplace surround, with built-in shelving on both sides keeping the wall from going flat. Cream upholstered seating anchors the sitting area. That curved marble kitchen island in the foreground is a good reminder of just how far this floor plan opens up — you can read the whole thing from one spot.
Trend Alert: Open-concept great rooms are increasingly designed with a strong visual anchor wall opposite the kitchen, so the living area doesn’t read as an afterthought to the cooking zone. A fireplace flanked by built-ins handles that without relying on furniture alone to define the space. It’s a layout strategy that holds up far better than partition walls once families actually start using the room.
Brass Fixtures and White Quartz Make This Kitchen Worth Coming Home To

Waterfall island edge, bridge faucet in brushed brass, glass-front uppers — everything stays cohesive without pushing into precious territory.
In The Details: Mixing white painted cabinets with darker wood uppers on a single wall is a practical way to break up a large kitchen without committing to a full two-tone design. It draws the eye to that wall without demanding a statement piece to justify the attention. Cabinet lighting under the uppers does real work here too, washing the backsplash evenly so the marble veining reads clearly at counter level rather than disappearing into shadow.
Step into the kitchen and dining zone and the material choices get even more interesting up close.
Rattan Pendant and Wood Chairs Bring Texture Into an Otherwise Quiet Dining Space

Bar stools with brass legs anchor the island while wood-framed dining chairs pull warmth into the seating area on the other side. The rattan pendant overhead is doing more than people give it credit for — without it, this dining space would read as a furniture catalog page. It gives the eye somewhere to land and reminds you the room was actually put together by a person.
Rattan Headboard and Round Mirror Give This Bedroom Real Backbone

A woven rattan headboard anchors the room while a leather-strapped mirror and slim wall sconces add detail without crowding the wall.
History Corner: Rattan furniture peaked in the mid-20th century as designers reached for natural materials that could hold their own against modernist steel and glass. It dropped out of fashion for decades before a broader shift toward organic textures pulled it back into mainstream interiors. Now it shows up as comfortably in high-end design as it once did in casual coastal bungalows — which is either a full-circle moment or just good taste reasserting itself, depending on who you ask.
Marble Vessel Sinks and Gold Fixtures Do a Lot of Heavy Lifting in Here

Two vessel sinks cut from veined marble sit on a dark vanity, brass faucets positioned just slightly off-center in a way that reads deliberate rather than careless.
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White board-and-batten siding and a two-car garage define the exterior view at the top of this pin. The first-floor plan below shows a foyer, kitchen with island, dining, living room, office, mud room, second bedroom, and two patio areas off the rear.
