
Anyone who has ever watched their family scatter to four separate screens the moment dinner ends knows the quiet frustration of a house that never pulls anyone back together. The Landons Cove is built around reversing that, with an open main living area that keeps conversation going after the plates are cleared, a country kitchen big enough for kids doing homework at the island while someone finishes cooking, and a bonus room that gives everyone a reason to stay close without being on top of each other.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,589
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

Single-story layout with four bedrooms in a split arrangement that keeps the master suite private. The great room anchors the center, with the kitchen, dining area, and rear porch all flowing naturally off it.
Floor Plan

The upper level shows a bonus room measuring 14 by 17 feet with 8-foot ceilings, a full bath, and a closet off the stair landing. Dashed lines indicate the roof outline over the main floor below.
Botanical Gallery Wall and a Console Table That Know Exactly What They’re Doing
Nine framed leaf prints in a tight grid anchor the entryway without competing with the room’s quiet palette. Below them, a farmhouse console with X-leg detailing holds a marble-base lamp and a woven basket tucked underneath, with a few leaning frames that keep things from feeling too composed. French doors with divided lights pull natural light deep into the space.
Why That Grid Arrangement Works Harder Than It Looks
Nine frames in a 3×3 grid read as a single mass rather than nine separate objects, which gives a foyer wall enough visual weight to hold its own against double-door entry architecture. Consistent frame size and near-identical botanical subjects keep it cohesive without going rigid. If even one frame were a different proportion, the whole grouping would start to look accidental.
Stone Fireplace Wall With Built-Ins That Actually Earn Their Keep

Floor-to-ceiling stone surrounds the firebox without swallowing the room whole. Dark green built-ins flank both sides, and white slipcovered seating keeps the whole thing from tipping into heavy.
Step inside and the kitchen makes a strong first impression before you’ve even set down your keys.
Four Bar Stools and an Island Wide Enough to Mean It

Blue upholstered counter stools pull up to a generous island topped in white stone. Painted shaker cabinets, a custom range hood, and brushed silver pendants keep the finishes grounded without feeling matchy.
Gray Tufted Chairs Around a Dark Pedestal Table That Pulls the Whole Room Together

The nail-head trim on those gray chairs does real decorative work — detail that reads well from across the room without requiring anything extra. Dark walnut on both the table and sideboard gives the light walls something to push against, which is exactly what they need.
Budget Tip: Mirrored cabinet doors on a sideboard like this one cost a fraction of solid wood versions and bounce enough light around to make a smaller dining room feel less closed in. Dark wood pieces get overlooked at furniture outlets and secondhand stores more than you’d expect, so that’s worth checking before buying new. Pair with a simple white rug to hold the layered look without blowing the budget.
Seven-Blade Fan and a Tray Ceiling That Give This Bedroom Real Presence

The tufted white linen headboard sets the tone and everything else follows. Light wood flooring keeps the pale gray walls from reading cold, and two table lamps handle the night-lighting without fuss. Three framed prints above the headboard add just enough visual weight. Not too many, not too few — it’s one of those rooms that’s hard to argue with.
Style Tip: Oversized ceiling fans work harder than most people expect in large bedrooms. A bigger blade span moves more air at lower speeds, which means quieter operation while you sleep. If your bedroom runs warm, sizing up on the fan matters more than the paint color.
Warm Wood Vanities and Hexagon Tile That Make This Bathroom Worth Waking Up In

Matching light wood vanities run the full length of one wall, topped with quartz that has just enough veining to feel deliberate rather than generic. A freestanding soaking tub anchors the far end, and bronze hardware ties the whole room together without trying too hard.
By The Numbers: Freestanding tubs need more floor clearance than built-ins, so bathroom square footage matters more here than most buyers realize before they start renovating. Hex floor tile remains popular in design circles partly because its grout lines add grip underfoot without requiring a separate safety mat. Wood-tone cabinetry in bathrooms holds up considerably better than it used to, thanks to moisture-resistant finishes that weren’t widely available until fairly recently.
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The exterior rendering shows a farmhouse-style home with board-and-batten siding, stone accents, and dark shutters. The floor plan underneath reveals four bedrooms, a great room with 11-foot ceilings, an oversized rear porch, and a master suite pushed well away from the rest of the house.
Try This: Putting the master suite on the opposite side of the floor plan from the kids’ bedrooms is one of the more quietly useful layout decisions a family can make. You get real separation without burning extra square footage to get it, and as kids get older and everyone’s schedule stops lining up, you’ll be glad it’s there.
