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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,874
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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First floor shows open kitchen, family room, and dining flowing together, plus mud room, pantry, foyer, and two-car garage.
Floor Plan

The upper floor holds four bedrooms, including a primary suite with a walk-in closet and private bath. Three secondary bedrooms share a full bath near a linen closet, with stair access on the left.
Editor’s Note: The walk-in closet off the primary bedroom measures 7-4 by 7-6, which is a generous allowance for a home at this scale. All four bedrooms carry 8-foot ceilings, keeping proportions consistent across the floor. The private bath’s 72-inch vanity is a detail that punches above its weight in daily function.
Warm Entry Hallway with Geometric Pendant and Console Table
Natural light from the side window catches the light wood floors and creamy walls before the eye travels down toward the living room beyond. A white console table holds stacked books, a ceramic vase, and a small succulent planter. Wicker baskets tucked underneath keep things practical without sacrificing the calm mood.
Try This: Entryways with console tables work harder when you use the space underneath. A pair of woven baskets can hold leashes, throws, or seasonal items you’d otherwise leave on the floor. It’s storage that doesn’t announce itself.
Dark Island Base Against White Cabinetry Makes a Strong Contrast Work

Navy cabinetry on the island anchors the space without competing with white perimeter cabinets above. Three lantern pendants with exposed candelabra bulbs tie into the black hardware throughout. Boucle counter stools add softness against the wood-leg frames below.
Material Matters: Quartz countertops hold up better against daily prep work than marble, which can etch from citrus or vinegar. The herringbone backsplash pattern here uses standard subway tile laid at an angle, so material costs stay low while the visual result reads far more custom. Pairing a dark island base with light upper cabinets is one of the more practical ways to introduce contrast without repainting an entire kitchen.
Where the kitchen leans practical, the living room is where the home’s character really settles in.
Stone Fireplace Tower Anchors an Open Living Room with Views on Two Sides

Stacked stone runs floor to ceiling beside a wood mantel, grounding the neutral sectional and vintage-style rug. Recessed lighting keeps the ceiling clean. Outside, rolling green hills fill every window.
Candle Chandelier Over a Light Oak Dining Table Sets the Farmhouse Tone

Light oak chairs and table read warm against the white walls. Candles on the chandelier and hurricane holders on the runner reinforce that without trying too hard.
- Open sightlines to the kitchen let one cook stay connected while others eat
- A dark island base against white perimeter cabinets gives the kitchen visual weight without extra square footage
- Pendant lanterns over the island scale better than recessed-only lighting in a tall open plan
Black-and-White Botanical Gallery Wall Turns a Landing Into a Destination

Framed botanical photography in black and white gives this carpeted landing real visual weight without adding furniture. Seven frames arranged in a loose grid keep the grouping from feeling rigid. Downstairs, a glimpse of the dining area shows how open the floor plan really is.
Style Tip: Gallery walls on stair landings work best when every frame shares one unifying element, whether that’s subject matter, tone, or frame finish. Mixing all three creates noise. Here, consistent black frames and a single subject do the heavy lifting.
Vaulted Primary Bedroom Where Gray Tones Do the Heavy Lifting

Chunky knit throw and layered bedding in charcoal and taupe give this carpeted bedroom a grounded, unhurried feel. The en-suite bathroom is visible beyond.
Ask Yourself: Carpet in a bedroom muffles sound better than hard flooring, which matters if the room sits above a living area. If you’re weighing flooring options for a primary suite, don’t underestimate how much that acoustic difference affects daily comfort. A low-pile, neutral tone like this one won’t date as quickly as a pattern or bold color.
Marble Vanity Top and Brass Fixtures Pull a Neutral Bathroom Together

Brushed brass pulls double duty here, showing up on the shower fixtures and the sconces above the mirror. That repetition is what keeps the room from feeling scattered. White cabinetry pairs with a marble-look countertop, and gray floor tile grounds both without competing.
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Outside, white board-and-batten siding pairs with stone accents and a two-car garage door that takes up most of the facade. Below, the first-floor plan shows how the kitchen, family room, and dining area share an open layout, with a mudroom, pantry, and foyer rounding out the ground level.
