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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,443
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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Single-story layout flows from mudroom entry through open kitchen, dining, and great room, with master suite privately offset near the garage.
Wraparound Covered Porch Anchors This White Board-and-Batten Barndominium

Dark corrugated metal roofing contrasts sharply against white vertical siding. Wood posts support a deep covered porch with room for outdoor seating and a grill. It’s a working back patio, not a decorative one. Tall sliding glass doors pull the interior light outward.
Oval Mirror, Warm Wood Credenza, and a Glass Door That Pulls You Outside
Natural light cuts across hardwood floors toward a full-glass exterior door. The wood credenza grounds the entry with ceramic vases and a leather-hung oval mirror above.
Warm Light and Woven Blinds Give This Living Room Its Quiet Confidence

Roman shades in woven grasscloth filter the afternoon sun without blocking the green views outside. Two sofas in off-white linen face a pair of textured accent chairs with wood frames. Blue plaid pillows keep things from reading too soft. The wood fireplace surround grounds the whole wall without competing with it.
Material Matters: The woven grasscloth Roman shades do real work here, softening glare while keeping the connection to the outdoors intact. That texture also keeps the room from feeling too polished, which is exactly what a barndominium interior needs. Pair them with simple linen drapes rather than blackout panels to preserve that layered, relaxed quality.
Step inside and the kitchen makes its case immediately, before you’ve even set down your keys.
Walnut Island Base and Brass Faucet Pull Focus in This Open Kitchen

The two-tone approach works because the walnut island base earns the contrast against the white shaker uppers. Brass hardware and a bridge faucet keep the finishes consistent. Three backless wood stools tuck cleanly under the quartz overhang.
Round Pedestal Table and Floor-to-Ceiling Glass Keep Dinner Feeling Open

Warm oak flooring and a sculptural pedestal table set the tone here. Upholstered dining chairs in a boucle-style fabric soften the hard edges. Behind it all, oversized sliding glass panels frame an uninterrupted view of open green fields.
In The Details: Pendant placement matters more than people think. Hanging a fixture directly above a round table pulls the eye up and reinforces the shape below, making the table feel like the room’s anchor rather than just a place to eat.
Upholstered Headboard and Matched Nightstands Give This Bedroom Its Calm Authority

Linen headboard, matching ceramic-based lamps, and a wood bench at the footboard keep everything grounded. Paneled walls add quiet structure without competing.
Common Mistake: Matching nightstands sound safe, but using the exact same lamp on both sides can make a bedroom feel staged rather than lived in. Swapping one lamp for a smaller sculptural object or a stack of books breaks the symmetry just enough. It’s a small shift that reads as intentional rather than showroom-perfect.
Freestanding Tub, Brass Fixtures, and Glass That Opens the Whole Room Up

Black hardware on the frameless glass door reads sharply against soft white tile. Brass faucets and shower fittings pull the eye right. That freestanding soaking tub sits centered under the window, letting in real daylight rather than relying on recessed lighting alone.
Editor’s Note: Freestanding tubs look best when they’re not pushed against a wall. Centering one under a window gives it breathing room and lets natural light do the work that artificial lighting can’t replicate. It’s a placement decision that costs nothing extra but reads as intentional every time.
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Exterior rendering shows a white board-and-batten barndominium with a metal roof, covered front porch, and glass garage doors. Below, the floor plan reveals three bedrooms, an open-concept kitchen, dining, and great room with sloped ceilings, a mudroom with a bench and lockers, and dual covered porches totaling significant outdoor living space.
