
Every family has a house they associate with Christmas — someone’s aunt, someone’s grandmother — where the table had three leaves and the coats got piled on a bed and the kitchen stayed full until midnight. The Hollowell is built around that kind of night: a butler pantry that keeps the chaos off the main counter, a kitchen open enough for twelve, a dining room that earns its square footage, and a three-car garage that fits the overflow when everyone shows up at once.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 4,125
- Bedrooms: 5
- Bathrooms: 5.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

The first floor puts the family room and kitchen at the center, with a butler pantry and hidden pantry flanking the cooking zone. A master suite anchors the right wing, Bed 2 sits just below it, and an office tucks near the garage entry. Out front, the porch stretches more than 41 feet across — long enough to actually use.
Floor Plan – Second Floor

Upstairs, five bedrooms cluster around a central hall, shared baths tucked between rooms and a dedicated master suite wing holding its own corner of the floor.
Travertine Fireplace, Ocean View, and a Noguchi Table That Earns Its Spot
Beige linen sofas anchor a cream wool rug while a travertine surround frames the lit gas fireplace beneath a wall-mounted TV.
Style Math: Warm beige upholstery against travertine and dark hardwood is a pairing that doesn’t need an accent wall to feel finished. The Noguchi coffee table does real work here — its organic silhouette breaks up what could otherwise read as a very composed, very beige room. Slide open the doors to the water view and you’ve got a living room that hosts well without performing.
Where the living room leans warm and layered, the kitchen pulls everything back to clean lines and cool marble.
Brass Pendants and a Island Built for Four at the Counter

Two cone pendants on brass stems hang low over the island — low enough to feel deliberate, not like someone just picked a standard drop height. White shaker cabinets run floor-to-ceiling on both walls, and the dark hardwood does most of the heavy lifting against all that white. Four upholstered counter stools with black legs keep the seating from feeling too precious. It’s the kind of kitchen where people end up standing around the island for an hour before anyone sits down for dinner.
Dark Chairs Against Blonde Wood Make This Dining Room Work Without Trying

A light oak table paired with near-black chairs creates contrast that carries the room on its own. The cream jute rug anchors the whole thing without competing with the dark hardwood floor beneath it.
Ask Yourself: Count your chairs before you fall in love with a dining table. Six seats sounds generous until half your family shows up with a plus-one. A bench along one side can quietly add two or three spots without breaking the look.
Linen Headboard and Dark Hardwood Pull Off Quiet Without Being Boring

Matching nightstands with drawer storage flank an upholstered platform bed, the symmetry deliberate rather than accidental. The bench at the foot earns its place — there’s a lot of floor to cross before you reach the door, and rooms this large make you feel that distance in the morning.
By The Numbers: Bedroom benches go back to 18th-century European estates, where they served as dressing aids before closets existed. Now they solve a practical problem most people don’t think about until after they’ve bought a king-size bed and run out of places to sit.
Double Vanity Done Right With Warm Oak and Brushed Gold Hardware

Solid oak cabinetry pairs with a marble-look countertop, and the gold shows up consistently on the faucets, pulls, and sconces — enough repetition to feel intentional without tipping into matchy. Each sink gets its own mirror and dedicated light. Symmetry this clean rarely needs anything else on the walls.
Why the sconce placement actually matters here
Centering a sconce above each mirror rather than running one long bar across both puts light where faces actually need it. Shadow behaves differently when the source sits near eye level, and for two people using the vanity at the same time, that separation makes a real functional difference — one most renderings gloss right over.
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The exterior rendering shows a New American craftsman with timber porch columns and a mix of brick and board-and-batten siding. The floor plan below confirms what the layout promises: a 20×22 family room at the center, with a butler pantry, hidden pantry, drop zone, three-car garage, master suite, and second bedroom all accounted for.
