
Everyone remembers a friend’s house where the kitchen opened into everything else and nobody ever wanted to leave — dinner ran late, homework happened at the island, and the front door barely had time to close between arrivals. The Lanedale is built around exactly that: open-concept living that keeps the cook in the conversation, a three-car garage that absorbs the daily chaos, and a transitional design that holds together no matter how many people are inside it.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 3,975
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 4.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

First floor shows open living and dining, kitchen with island, bedroom two, office, and 3-car garage.
Floor Plan – Second Floor

Upper level holds four bedrooms, three bathrooms, and two walk-in closets arranged around a central stair, with the primary suite anchoring the right corner behind its own bath and closet.
Low-Profile Sectional and Raw Wood Coffee Table Nail the Casual-Elegant Balance
That coffee table is doing a lot of work. Carved from a single slab with visible grain and rounded legs, it reads natural without trying too hard, and because the sectional sits unusually low, the sightlines stay clear all the way to the sliding glass doors and the lawn beyond. Gray armchairs with olive cushions keep the palette grounded without tipping cold.
Style Math: Warm neutrals plus raw wood plus one organic-edged coffee table. That’s the whole formula — you don’t need much else when the bones are this quiet.
Crimson Fridge, Rattan Pendants, Yellow Walls — Wait, It Works

A bold red fridge against warm yellow walls has no business working as well as it does here. White cabinetry and pale wood floors give the whole thing enough breathing room that the contrast lands as playful rather than chaotic.
Did You Know: Open-plan kitchens with a central island tend to get used more for casual dining than formal dining rooms do. Clustering pendant lights over an island rather than spacing them apart pulls the eye downward and makes the island read as a place to gather, not just a surface to prep on.
The bedroom takes a quieter approach, trading the kitchen’s contrast for something more layered and restful.
Channeled Headboard and Blue-Gray Walls Make the Whole Room Feel Pulled Together

Vertical channel tufting on the headboard draws the eye upward without demanding anything else from the walls. Two abstract prints and pendant lamps handle the rest, and the hardwood floors keep it from floating off into softness entirely.
Covered Rear Porch With Floor-to-Ceiling Glass Pulls the Outdoors Straight In

Stone veneer at the base, board-and-batten above, warm light pushing through the sliding glass doors. This rear porch isn’t trying to be a showpiece — it’s just genuinely usable, which is harder to pull off than it looks.
The Psychology Behind This: Spaces that blur the line between inside and outside tend to become default gathering spots because they remove the formality of “going outside.” People linger longer when they haven’t fully committed to being outdoors — that in-between feeling is genuinely hard to manufacture with furniture alone, and a covered porch with glass doors does it almost automatically.
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The exterior rendering shows a transitional two-story home with board-and-batten siding, stacked stone, and a flat-roof three-car garage wing. Below it, the first-floor plan maps out a kitchen with island, main-floor bedroom, office, pantry, and covered front porch spanning nearly 38 feet.
