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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,874
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan

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The first floor covers 822 square feet and keeps the kitchen central, connecting directly to the family room and dining area. A pantry sits off the kitchen for added storage. The foyer leads past a mudroom into the main living space. A two-car garage occupies the lower portion, with a mechanical room nearby.
Floor Plan

Four bedrooms occupy this upper level, with three grouped near a shared hall bath and a fourth positioned near a private en-suite. A central hallway connects all rooms. Staircase access and a linen closet round out the practical layout.
Editor’s Note: Upper-level layouts like this one benefit from placing the primary suite away from secondary bedrooms, reducing noise transfer between spaces. Positioning one bedroom near a private bath adds flexibility for guests or multigenerational living. The central hall keeps traffic flow direct without cutting through any bedroom.
White Vinyl Siding and Manicured Shrubs Define This Rear Exterior View
Horizontal white siding wraps both stories above a sliding glass door. Columnar arborvitae, boxwood rounds, and ornamental grasses line a mulched bed along the foundation.
Columnar arborvitae, boxwood rounds, and ornamental grasses line a mulched bed along the foundation.
Geometric Pendant Light Anchors This Warm Entryway Corridor

Black iron geometric chandelier draws the eye down a hallway finished in light hardwood flooring and cream walls. A white console table holds a ceramic vase, a table lamp, and potted succulents. A woven basket with a throw sits below. The living room with neutral upholstered seating is visible at the far end.
Style Math: Mixing metals and naturals in an entryway sets the tone for the whole house. Pairing a black iron fixture with raw ceramic vessels and woven textures creates contrast without competing colors. The ratio here roughly follows a 60-30-10 split between neutral walls, warm wood tones, and black metal accents.
Navy Island Base and White Quartzite Counter Create Contrast Worth Noticing

Painted navy cabinets anchor a large island topped with white quartzite. Three upholstered barstools with wood legs pull up to the seating overhang. Iron orb pendants hang above. White shaker perimeter cabinets, a herringbone tile backsplash, and warm hardwood floors complete the palette.
Trend Alert: Two-tone kitchen design, pairing white perimeter cabinets with a darker island, has moved well beyond trend status into standard practice for new builds. The contrast does real visual work, defining the island as a distinct zone rather than blending it into the rest of the space. Choosing a deep navy over gray gives the room staying power as gray-dominant palettes continue to cycle out.
Stone Fireplace Tower and Layered Neutrals Make This Living Room Hard to Leave

Stacked stone rises floor to ceiling beside a gas fireplace. Gray sectional, wool rug, and wood mantel anchor warm, neutral tones throughout.
Style Tip: Pairing a dark console table with light upholstery is one of the most reliable ways to add contrast without introducing color. In open-plan spaces, that contrast helps visually separate the living area from adjacent rooms. Repeating the dark finish in smaller accents, like picture frames or drawer pulls, keeps it intentional rather than accidental.
Candlelit Farmhouse Dining Room Frames Views of Open Countryside

Warm wood chairs and a trestle table sit on a geometric wool rug. The iron candelabra chandelier draws the eye upward. Ceramic vessels, pillar candles, and a bowl of fruit keep the table grounded. Windows on two walls flood the space with natural light and open field views.
Try This: Rugs sized too small are one of the most common mistakes in dining rooms. All chair legs should remain on the rug even when pulled out from the table. For a table this size, a 9×12 foot rug is the reliable starting point.
Vaulted Ceiling and Ensuite Access Make This Primary Bedroom Worth the Upstairs Climb

Gray upholstered bed sits on a charcoal area rug, flanked by a round wood nightstand with a lamp. Carpet flooring, recessed lighting, and an ensuite bathroom visible through an open door.
Why Carpet Still Makes Sense in Primary Bedrooms
Hard flooring has dominated new builds for years, but carpet in a primary bedroom offers something tile and wood cannot: underfoot softness first thing in the morning. It also absorbs sound more effectively, which matters in upper-level rooms where footsteps carry down to living spaces below. Choosing a low-pile, neutral-tone carpet like the one shown here keeps the look current without sacrificing comfort.
Marble Tile Shower and Walk-In Closet Access Anchor This Primary Bath

Calcutta-style marble tiles line the walk-in shower floor to ceiling. White cabinet storage sits below wall hooks holding robes and towels. Dark charcoal floor tiles ground the space. A separate water closet door sits to the right, with a vanity countertop visible at the frame edge.
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White board-and-batten siding and stone accents define the exterior of this modern farmhouse. Below, the first floor plan shows 822 square feet of living space, including a family room, open kitchen, mud room, pantry, foyer, and an attached two-car garage.
