
🔥 Would you like to save this?
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,713
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
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.
Single-story layout features an open great room connecting kitchen, dining, and rear porch. Three bedrooms include a primary suite with WIC and Jack and Jill bath serving two secondary bedrooms.
White Lap Siding, a Covered Porch, and Zero Wasted Curb Appeal

Crisp white lap siding wraps the exterior without interruption, and the covered front porch keeps things grounded with two rocking chairs and a hanging fern. Concrete steps lead straight out to the lawn. Landscaping hugs the foundation with hostas and ornamental grasses planted against fresh dark mulch.
Stone Fireplace, Warm Wood Mantel, and a View Worth Keeping
Gray upholstered sofas anchor the seating around a stone-clad fireplace with a reclaimed wood mantel. Light oak floors and recessed lighting keep the space grounded without competing.
Color Story: Warm greige walls hold the room together without pulling focus from the fireplace surround, which does the heavy lifting. The white cabinet unit on the right introduces a cooler note that keeps the palette from reading too dim. Stone, wood, and painted furniture give you three distinct textures without any one material dominating.
Marble Island, Dark Base, and a Dining Nook With a View That Earns Its Place

The island’s dark painted base against white quartz does the visual work here. Three lantern pendants hang in a row overhead, unifying the kitchen and dining zones without matching too precisely. Potted herbs on the counter keep it from feeling staged.
Style Tip: Mixing pendant styles in one open-plan space works better than it sounds, provided you keep the finish consistent. Here, every light fixture uses the same dark iron tone, so the varying shapes read as collected rather than mismatched. That single thread of continuity is what holds the ceiling together.
Marble Countertops, Subway Tile, and a Mud Room That Actually Does Its Job

Front-load washers tucked under a marble counter make laundry feel less like a chore.
Woven baskets and coat hooks in the adjoining mud nook pull real organizational weight without looking forced.
Greige Walls, Layered Linens, and a Window That Frames Rolling Farmland

Carpet underfoot, a knit throw draped across gray bedding, and matching round nightstands ground the room quietly.
Budget Tip: Carpet is often cheaper to install than hardwood or LVP, making it a smart choice for bedrooms where comfort matters more than resale optics. If you’re working with a tight budget, put your flooring money into the main living areas and save in the sleeping spaces.
Frameless Glass, Mosaic Tile Accent Band, and a Shower With a Pastoral View

Large-format gray tiles cover the walk-in shower walls, broken up by a horizontal mosaic strip that adds texture without competing. Marble countertops run the full length of the double vanity. Outside, open farmland fills the window behind the sink.
Style Math: Frameless glass enclosures cost more upfront than framed alternatives, but they make a shower feel significantly larger without adding square footage. Pairing them with large-format tile reduces grout lines, which cuts down cleaning time. Both decisions pay off more in daily use than they do in photos.
LED Strip Lighting, Gray Storage Bins, and a Walk-In That Connects Directly to the Bath

Warm-toned LED strips run along the upper shelves, keeping the space from feeling like a utility room. Matching gray fabric bins do the organizational work without demanding attention. Hanging sections stay sparse, which makes the closet feel functional rather than maxed out. The sliding glass door into the marble bath is a smart, space-saving detail.
Why LED Strip Lighting Works Better Here Than Recessed Cans
Recessed cans in a walk-in closet create shadows exactly where you don’t want them, right at the hanging rod level, where you’re trying to match colors and textures. Strip lighting mounted at shelf height throws light downward onto clothing, which is far more practical. It’s also easier to retrofit during a remodel since it doesn’t require cutting into ceiling joists.
Pin It

Exterior photo of a white farmhouse and its single-story three-bedroom floor plan below.
