
🔥 Would you like to save this?
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,112
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan

In order to come up with the very specific design ideas, we create most designs with the assistance of state-of-the-art AI interior design software. Also, assume links that take you off the site are affiliate links such as links to Amazon. this means we may earn a commission if you buy something.
The 2,112 sq. ft. main floor centers on a 17×18 great room with an 11-foot ceiling and fireplace. The primary suite sits privately to the right, while two bedrooms share a bath on the left. A covered front porch, rear porch, and mudroom round out the layout.
Floor Plan

Accessed by a staircase with a “dn” marker, this upper-level layout shows a single future bonus room measuring 12 by 20-6 with an 8-foot ceiling. At 280 square feet, it’s a compact but functional space ready for finishing whenever the homeowner’s ready.
Warm Stone Fireplace Anchors an Open Living Room Built for Gathering
Stone runs floor to ceiling around the fireplace, grounding the room with real visual weight. Floating wood shelves flank it on both sides. Gray walls meet white board-and-batten wainscoting below. Two sofas and a pair of chairs face inward, conversation-ready.
Editor’s Note: Stone fireplace surrounds like this one work especially well in farmhouse builds because they bridge rustic character with clean-lined modern interiors. Pairing them with white wainscoting keeps the look fresh rather than heavy. It’s one of the most requested features in open-concept family rooms today.
Candle Chandelier and Round Table Set the Tone for Farmhouse Dining

Black ladder-back chairs and a wooden round table sit under an iron candle chandelier.
Quick Fix: Round dining tables earn their place in open-plan farmhouse layouts because they keep conversation flowing without the head-of-table formality. If you’re sizing one for a similar space, make sure there’s at least 36 inches between the table edge and the nearest wall or furniture so chairs can pull out comfortably. The chevron rug underneath also helps define the dining zone without boxing it in with a hard partition.
Pendant Lights and a Dark Island Counter Pull a Farmhouse Kitchen Into Focus

Three matte black pendants hang low over an oversized island with a dark wood counter, grounding the white cabinetry and stainless refrigerator below.
Why That Island Height Matters More Than You’d Think
Counter-height seating at a kitchen island changes how people use a space. Guests pull up those barstools and stay, which means the island does double duty as prep space and casual dining spot without needing a separate breakfast nook. It’s a practical choice that earns its square footage in a farmhouse layout where the kitchen is often the social center of the home.
Tray Ceiling and Mountain Views Give This Guest Bedroom Real Presence

White panel bed and built-in desk keep the room grounded while the picture window pulls rolling hills and distant peaks directly into view.
Did You Know: Tray ceilings are a practical upgrade in bedrooms because they add architectural interest without eating into floor space. Recessed lighting mounted inside the tray, as seen here, keeps the room bright without requiring a pendant that might feel too low over a bed.
Double Vanity With Dark Cabinetry Does the Heavy Lifting in This Primary Bath

Undermount sinks sit flush in a quartz countertop above dark gray cabinetry. Rounded-rectangle mirrors with matte frames add softness. That door opening into the walk-in closet is a practical detail worth noticing.
Rounded-rectangle mirrors with matte frames add softness.
Dark Cabinetry and Subway Tile Make This Laundry Room Work Hard and Look Good

Laundry rooms rarely get this much cabinet storage, and it shows.
Upper cabinets run nearly wall-to-wall above a marble-look countertop that wraps the corner and gives the washer and dryer a built-in, finished look. Roman shades in the same blue-gray as the cabinetry pull it all together without looking accidental.
Vaulted Bonus Room Pulls Double Duty as Office and Lounge

Sloped ceiling, leather seating, and a built-in desk share carpet-covered attic space.
Material Matters: Carpet is often overlooked in bonus rooms, but it does real acoustic work in angled-ceiling spaces where hard flooring would amplify sound. Low-pile options hold up better under desk chairs with casters. If you’re splitting the room between work and lounge use, a single consistent flooring material keeps the layout from feeling chopped up.
Pin It

Exterior photo of a white farmhouse paired with a 2,112-square-foot main floor plan showing three bedrooms and open living.
Common Mistake: Buyers often underestimate how much a mudroom entry affects daily life. Having a dedicated drop zone between the garage and kitchen, like the one shown here, keeps clutter from migrating into living spaces. If you’re building new, don’t treat it as an afterthought.
