
Four cars in the garage is not an indulgence — it’s the physical proof that you finally built a life with enough room in it. The Ironvale Crescent is set up for exactly that: a four-car garage, a dedicated wine cellar, single-story flow, and Craftsman bones that look like they were earned.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,950
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

The main floor covers 2,950 square feet and fits a master bedroom suite, second bedroom, great room, kitchen with pantry, craft-laundry room, mud room, elevator, and a 4-car garage all on one level.
Floor Plan – Basement

The lower level finishes out at 2,186 square feet, and it earns every one of them. A home theater, wine cellar, and bar sit clustered near the family room, which is the right call — those three spaces want to be adjacent. Two bedrooms occupy the perimeter, and a mud room and mechanical room take care of the utilitarian side without stealing square footage from anywhere it matters.
Golden Hour Hits Different When Your Deck Floats Above Open Prairie
Exposed timber brackets frame an elevated covered deck with steel railings, and the stone columns anchoring the base do a lot of visual work. Warm light catches the stucco and wood trim at a particular angle in the evening that no staged photo fully captures — you have to be standing on that deck to get it.
Worth Knowing: Homes on elevated lots like this often use a split-entry deck design to handle grade changes without burying the lower level. The stone column bases pull double duty here — they carry the structural load while visually anchoring a house that could easily feel like it’s hovering. Buyers who’ve spent years thinking about this build tend to care as much about the view looking out as the impression looking in from the road.
Dark Cabinetry, Wine Rack Built In, and That View Out Back

A vertical wine rack slots into the upper cabinet column beside double wall ovens, with a white quartz island anchoring the center of the room.
By The Numbers: Two-tone cabinet schemes like this one pair white uppers on the perimeter with darker lowers to keep the room from feeling top-heavy. The built-in wine rack replaces a filler panel that would’ve gone to waste anyway, and specifying it during the cabinet order costs a fraction of what a retrofit runs later.
Farmhouse Table, Bar Seating, and Thirty Miles of Nothing Out Those Windows

Sitting at that bar, you’d be watching hawks circle above open fields while your coffee’s still hot.
The island seats four on swivel stools with footrests. On the dining side, a trestle table handles eight — bench on the far end, chairs everywhere else. Two pendant styles hang in the same room without competing, which sounds easy and isn’t.
Floor-to-Ceiling Stacked Stone and a Sectional That Earns Its Square Footage

Stacked stone runs straight from the firebox to the roofline without interruption, which takes real confidence in the structural plan. Below it, a gray linen sectional, a console table with iron legs, and a concrete cube ottoman keep the furniture zone grounded without competing with the wall. Ceiling fans with black blades handle the volume above.
Material Matters: Full-height stacked stone installations need a ledger system anchored into the framing — adhesive alone won’t hold it because the cumulative weight adds up fast. Natural ledgestone like what’s shown here has color variation built in, so it doesn’t need staining or sealing to look finished. That variation also means two walls from the same stone lot won’t match exactly, and that’s precisely what makes it read as real rather than a manufactured panel.
Tufted Headboard, Mirrored Nightstands, and Metal Florals That Actually Work

A button-tufted wingback headboard this tall commands the wall without fighting the room’s taupe palette — it just owns the space. Mirrored nightstands keep the floor visible underfoot, which matters more than people expect in a room this size. The wall-mounted metal florals scattered asymmetrically above the bed are the one detail that could have gone wrong easily. They don’t. They read sculptural rather than decorative, which is a harder thing to pull off than it looks.
Barn-Style Glass Door, Freestanding Tub, and Hex Tile That Pulls It Together

Sliding barn hardware on a glass panel is the right call here — it keeps the shower enclosed without swinging into the freestanding tub’s footprint, which a hinged door absolutely would. Geometric hex tile runs floor to ceiling behind the glass, giving the whole wall enough pattern to anchor the room without tipping into busy.
Coat Hooks on Shiplap Planks, Built-In Desk, and a Prairie View That Does the Work

Warm-toned shiplap panels anchor a mudroom drop zone with black coat hooks and a white bench seat below. A few steps away, light wood-grain cabinetry wraps a built-in desk under a wide triple window that looks straight out to open field. Two very different functions, handled cleanly in the same run of space.
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Exterior photo shows a gray Craftsman ranch set against open prairie. Floor plan below reveals 2,950 square feet with four-car garage and master suite.
