
The RV garage is the tell — somewhere in this family’s driveway sits a rig that needs a real home, and somewhere in the group chat is a message about Mom and Dad possibly moving in that everyone is still pretending to think about. The Hollowfield is built around exactly that reality: a proper in-law suite downstairs, an oversized garage bay, and a farmhouse layout roomy enough to keep three generations under one roof without anyone losing their mind by Sunday breakfast.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 4,109
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

The main floor puts the master suite and its walk-in closet on the left wing, well separated from the open family room and kitchen core. A mudroom, craft room, and walk-in pantry handle the daily chaos. Two covered porches and the dedicated RV garage bay round out what’s a genuinely well-organized single level.
Floor Plan – Second Floor

The upper floor keeps things simple: two bedrooms, each with a walk-in closet and hall bathroom access, with a loft sitting open between them. It’s a natural hangout spot for kids who want their own floor but not total isolation. Stairs drop straight to the main entry below.
Floor Plan – Basement
The basement is where this plan makes its case. Two bedrooms with individual walk-ins and baths, a full kitchenette, a dinette, and a family room that runs over a thousand square feet. A theatre is tucked off to the right, and there’s still room for cold storage, an exercise area, and three separate storage spaces. This is a real in-law suite — not a finished basement someone handed a keypad and called a suite.
Snow-Capped Views and a Covered Porch That Actually Has Room to Breathe

White lap siding keeps the exterior clean and unfussy — nothing competing, nothing trying too hard. The covered porch is the real draw: square columns, a standing-seam metal roof overhead, and enough square footage to fit actual furniture rather than two chairs and a potted plant. The wood-grain garage door pulls warmth into all that white. Mountains visible behind the tree line do the rest of the work.
Style Tip: Go with a rich walnut stain on the garage door rather than actual wood to get the warmth without the yearly maintenance. Carry the same tone into porch furniture or planters and the two ends of the facade start reading as one considered decision rather than two separate ones.
Hardwood Floors and French Doors That Make the Entryway Worth Coming Home To

Light oak hardwood runs straight through from the staircase landing to the front entry, grounding what could easily have felt like a transitional nowhere. French doors with black hardware pull the backyard greenery right into the sightline. That horizontal clerestory window on the right wall is doing quiet but real work — light without sacrificing the wall space the staircase needs beside it.
Style Math: Warm oak floors against cool gray walls work because neither one is competing for the same register. Paint the trim and door surround the same bright white throughout, and you get a clean line between wall and architecture that sharpens the whole entry. That contrast is where the crispness actually lives.
Vaulted Beams and Built-In Shelving That Earn Their Keep

Dark wood ceiling beams anchor the vault without overwhelming it. Arched built-ins flank a painted brick fireplace — actual storage that looks like it was always part of the room rather than added later. That sectional is sized for a family that genuinely uses the space, not for a showroom photo.
Arched built-ins flank a painted brick fireplace, giving the room actual storage that looks intentional.
Vaulted Ceilings and a Marble Island That Means Business

Exposed wood beams run the full pitch of the cathedral ceiling, and below them the waterfall marble island countertop earns its reputation as the room’s centerpiece. Four barstools say this spot gets used daily. Everything else — white cabinets, simple hardware, clean upper shelving — steps back and lets the island and the ceiling do the talking.
Editor’s Note: Oversized islands work best when you treat one end as a prep zone and the other as a place for people to land while you cook. Matching the island base to the perimeter cabinets keeps it from looking like a piece of furniture someone dragged in from another room — a small call, but it’s the difference between a kitchen that feels planned and one that feels assembled.
Four-Poster Bones and Globe Pendants That Pull the Room Together

Rustic wood posts frame the bed without needing a canopy to justify themselves. Globe pendants on a matte black ring hang low enough to feel considered rather than default. The gray woven throw and blue patterned rug keep the whole palette grounded — lived-in rather than precious.
Color Story: Warm wood tones read differently depending on what’s beside them. Against cool white walls, the four-poster’s oak finish looks richer than it would next to a warm cream. If you’re picking a wall color for a room like this, go cooler than your instinct says to.
Open Shower Wall and a Soaking Tub That Don’t Have to Fight for Space

Mosaic tile wraps the half-wall dividing the walk-in shower from the rest of the bath, and hardwood floors run through both zones without interruption. The freestanding tub sits directly under the window — natural light, no overhead fixture required. Simple layout, nothing overworked.
Pro Tip: Stopping tile at mid-wall rather than running it to the ceiling keeps a bathroom from feeling like a cave. It’s also a sensible budget move — you’re using roughly half the tile while still getting the texture where it actually registers. Save full-height coverage for the wet zone inside the shower, where it earns its cost.
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The exterior rendering shows a sprawling modern farmhouse with board-and-batten siding, a covered front porch, and a detached single-car garage wing. The floor plan below lays out the single-story main level: master suite, vaulted family room, open kitchen with pantry, mudroom, craft room, and a three-car garage configuration with the RV bay tucked in alongside.
