
Architects who have drawn enough floor plans will tell you the walkout basement is the feature self-made buyers always add when they finally stop compromising — morning coffee on the lower patio while the house is still quiet, a workshop with its own entrance, guests who never touch the main staircase, a Friday-night bar that stays well clear of the rest of the house. The Langford Hollow is built around exactly that: a walkout lower level, open contemporary sightlines, a main-floor layout that earns its square footage, and outdoor access that makes the whole thing feel deliberate rather than incidental.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 3,757
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 4.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

At 3,757 square feet, the main floor centers on a great room that opens toward a covered deck. Four bedrooms cluster to the right, including a large master suite, while a utility room, pantry, and front entry anchor the middle zone. A 4-car garage sits detached at lower right.
Floor Plan – Basement

The lower level packs 1,734 finished square feet into a home theater, recreation area, bar, exercise room, and game space, with a mechanical room and unfinished storage off to the right. Two stairways connect up to the main floor, and a circular patio extends from the west side — making this level feel less like a basement and more like a second house you happen to own below the first.
Did You Know: Putting the home theater on the lower level isn’t just a layout preference — it keeps sound from bleeding up into the living spaces above, which matters a lot once you’re actually watching something at volume. Pair it with the bar right nearby and the lower floor starts functioning as a genuinely self-contained entertainment wing.
Carved Into the Hillside, Built to Stay There
Stone retaining walls follow the natural grade while a wraparound deck cantilevers above a walkout lower level framed in timber and glass.
How the Retaining Walls Pull Double Duty
Those curved stone walls aren’t just holding back the hillside. They’re carving out a private yard that feels enclosed without being suffocating — genuinely difficult to pull off on a slope this steep. Builders likely dry-stacked or mortared locally sourced stone to echo the exterior cladding, so the whole composition reads as one material palette rather than a yard that happened to end up next to a house.
Exposed Beams, Mountain Views, and a Fireplace That Earns Its Wall

The vaulted shiplap ceiling with dark wood beams sets the tone before you’ve even sat down. Orb chandeliers serve as focal points and task lighting in the same swing, while a stone surround fireplace anchors one end of the room and the TV sits flush above it. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame mountain ridgelines. Hard to put a number on that.
Ask Yourself: If you’re finally building your forever home, think hard about ceiling height before locking in your plans. Vaulted great rooms feel generous for daily living, but they cost more to heat than you’d expect. Ask your builder whether spray foam insulation in the roof deck makes sense for your climate before framing begins — that conversation is much cheaper before the walls go up.
Robin’s Egg Blue Gets Its Moment Without Stealing the Whole Kitchen

Pairing a light blue island with white perimeter cabinets is a calculated risk that pays off here. The sage green range hood ties both tones together without actually matching either one — which is the point. Orb pendants in an oil-rubbed bronze finish keep the room from reading too coastal, and granite counters with gray and white veining pull the whole palette back to earth.
Style Tip: A contrasting island color works best when at least one other element in the room picks up that tone. Here, the hood echoes the island’s cool blue, so the color reads as intentional rather than accidental. Even a small repeat like that is the difference between a bold choice and one that looks like a mistake.
Wainscoting, Mountain Views, and a Chandelier That Knows Its Job

Board-and-batten wainscoting wrapping a full dining room wall is a commitment, and it pays off here.
Midmorning sunlight cuts hard across the white paneling and makes it look almost sculptural. The round iron chandelier stays grounded without muscling in on the window view behind it. Worth knowing if you’re debating wainscoting height: floor-to-chair-rail reads delicate, sometimes too delicate. Going taller, the way this room does, is what actually gives the wall enough presence to hold the space.
Fireplace on One Wall, French Doors on Another, and a Bed Worth Staying In

Gray carpet, gray walls, a ruched white comforter — it could easily go flat, but the teal TV console breaks the neutrals without blowing up the palette. That mosaic tile fireplace surround earns its corner, and the French doors give the whole room a quality that no window, however large, quite manages to replicate.
By The Numbers: Primary suites with a dedicated sitting area and in-room fireplace tend to show up in homes where the owners have built before and know exactly what they missed the first time. Adding a bedroom fireplace costs more upfront, but it reduces how hard the main HVAC system has to work overnight — a tradeoff that starts looking better after the first winter.
Vessel Sinks, Dark Hardware, and a Window That Borrows the Mountain

White cabinetry runs the full length of this double vanity, topped with granite that leans gray and gold. Round vessel sinks sit above the counter rather than dropping in, and oil-rubbed bronze fixtures carry the same finish across every faucet and drawer pull — a small consistency that holds the whole vanity together.
Designer’s Secret: Vessel sinks photograph beautifully but need a faucet with a taller spout than a standard drop-in. If you don’t account for the added bowl height during rough-in, you’ll end up with a faucet that barely clears the rim. Confirm spout height before your plumber sets the supply lines — fixing it afterward is a genuinely unpleasant conversation.
Leather Recliners, a Popcorn Machine, and a Projector That Means Business

A ceiling-mounted projector feeds a wall-framed screen sized for actual movies. Two rows of leather recliners give everyone a straight sightline, and a dedicated snack counter with a popcorn machine sits behind the seats. This room was clearly not an afterthought — someone made a list of what they always wanted and then actually built it.
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The exterior shows a contemporary mountain home with stone accents, covered deck, and three-car garage. Below it, the main floor plan lays out 3,757 square feet across a sprawling, angled layout with four bedrooms.
