
There is something the Hayfield gets right that a lot of floor plans miss entirely: it treats the front porch as a room, not an afterthought, pairing it with a rear porch for the quieter hours and an open main living area that pulls you back inside when you are ready. Single-story, 1,795 square feet, and laid out for people who still believe a slow morning is worth designing around.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,795
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan

Three bedrooms, two baths, open great room flowing into kitchen, dual covered porches, master suite with wet room, and an attached two-car garage.
Marble Counters, Dark Wood Island, and Enough Natural Light to Skip the Overhead Fixtures

White cabinetry runs the perimeter while a dark walnut island topped in marble holds the center of the kitchen. That rectangular wood-framed chandelier hanging above it reads as intentional rather than decorative — chosen, not defaulted to.
Step inside and the living room makes its case without saying much at all.
Vaulted Ceilings and a Wood Slab Coffee Table Set the Tone Early
Dark hardwood floors anchor cream upholstery, and the marble fireplace surround picks up the afternoon light without asking for attention.
Vaulted Living Room with a Fireplace That Actually Earns Its Place on the Wall

Warm hardwood floors run the full length of the open-concept space. The marble fireplace surround anchors the living area, and lit floating shelves keep that tall wall from feeling like dead space. It is the kind of room that looks finished without looking fussed over.
Trend Alert: Open-concept spaces are moving away from a single overhead fixture blasting light across the whole room. Pendant clusters above the island, recessed cans over the seating area, and under-shelf strips on the media wall each handle their own zone. The effect feels more considered, and it photographs better too.
Geometric Wall Art and a Knit Pouf That Make the Bedroom Feel Collected, Not Decorated

Honeycomb-patterned wood art anchors the bed without competing with the linen-white bedding, and sheer curtains soften the afternoon light coming through the slatted blinds. The room avoids the matching-set trap entirely.
Why It Works: Ceiling fans with integrated light kits are underrated in bedrooms where recessed lighting is not always practical. Wood-toned blades read warmer than metal finishes and tend to disappear into mixed-material rooms like this one rather than announcing themselves. A small choice, but it ties the ceiling into everything happening below it.
Brass Fixtures and a Marble Countertop That Justify the Splurge

Gold-toned faucets against marble with warm veining give this double vanity its personality. Dark wood mirror frames and a floating shelf keep things grounded. And honestly, the plants are doing more work here than most accessories would manage.
Gold-toned faucets against marble with warm veining give this double vanity its personality.
Gunmetal Appliances and Gold Knobs in a Laundry Room That Pulls Its Weight

Gunmetal front-loaders with gold knobs anchor the left wall, and the pairing works precisely because nothing else in the room is competing with it. Floating wood shelves on black iron brackets hold a trailing plant. Built-in white cabinetry runs the length of the opposite wall, which means storage is not an afterthought here — it is half the point of the room.
History Corner: Dedicated laundry rooms became a standard feature in American homes during the post-WWII housing boom, when washing machines moved out of basements and into purpose-built spaces on the main floor. Before that shift, most households relied on shared washrooms or outdoor wash lines well into the mid-20th century.
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The exterior rendering shows a board-and-batten farmhouse with a metal roof and a covered front porch that means business. Below it, the floor plan lays out three bedrooms, a great room, kitchen-dining combo, dual covered porches, and a two-car garage in 1,795 square feet.
