
A mudroom does not organize a family — it exposes one. Boots piled three deep, a hook that got assigned without a meeting, the dog leash that always ends up on the floor anyway: the Hayfield is built around that reality, with a dedicated mudroom entry, a three-car garage that keeps the chaos one door further back, an open living core where dinner conversations stretch past dessert, and a layout that gives everyone a place to land.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 3,350
- Bedrooms: 4-5
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

The single-story footprint runs 90 by 70 feet and fits five bedrooms, three full baths, and a great room that opens directly to the kitchen and dining area. A mudroom with lockers sits off the garage entry where it actually gets used, and the primary suite gets two walk-in closets.
Olive Velvet and White Brick Do the Heavy Lifting Here

White brick climbs floor to ceiling around the fireplace, with the TV mounted above and actual flames visible below. Next to the cream sectional, the olive velvet sofa does something unexpected — it works, and it shouldn’t need to be explained why. That wagon-wheel chandelier overhead is the thing keeping the room from tipping too formal, and the wood floors pull everything back toward warmth before it drifts too far.
Brass, Cream, and Navy Walk Into a Dining Room Together
A brass pendant with tube bulbs anchors the space above a natural wood table, cream chairs, and a faded rug that ties the palette together without overpowering it.
Common Mistake: Homeowners often choose a chandelier sized for the table length but forget ceiling height entirely, and the fixture ends up hanging too low for comfortable conversation. A reliable starting point is keeping the bottom of the light at least 30 inches above the tabletop in a standard room — and if your ceilings clear nine feet, add a few inches for every foot beyond that.
Dark Teal Island in an All-White Kitchen Earns Every Bit of Attention It Gets

Painting just the island a deep teal while keeping every cabinet white is a quieter move than it looks.
Three bucket-style barstools on hairpin legs pull up to the island without crowding it, and the globe pendants with brass fittings hang at a height that actually serves a conversation rather than just a catalog shoot.
Iron Canopy Beds Work Harder Than Wood Ones Ever Could

Sheer curtains draped from dark iron posts soften what could read as industrial. The Persian rug grounds the bed without competing with anything else in the room, and dark walnut nightstands keep the whole palette from going weightless.
Style Math: Four-poster and canopy beds tend to read as formal in photos but feel grounding in person because the frame defines the sleeping space without walls. Ceilings that clear nine feet can actually handle the vertical draw of canopy posts without feeling crowded — the room reads larger, not smaller. Stick with sheer fabric over heavy panels to keep both airflow and light moving through.
Gold Faucets and a Freestanding Tub Prove Warm Tones Belong in the Bathroom

Dark walnut cabinetry holds the vanity wall in place while a sculptural pendant above the soaking tub pulls focus in a direction most bathrooms never bother trying.
Style Tip: Freestanding tubs only read as a focal point when there’s enough open floor around them — crowd one into a tight space and it becomes an obstacle, not a statement. Aim for at least 18 inches of clearance on the sides so the silhouette can actually do its job.
Pin It

The exterior rendering shows a modern farmhouse barndominium with board-and-batten siding and a metal roof. The floor plan below lays out five bedrooms across that 90-foot span.
