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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,900
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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The main floor puts the family room and office at the front, with the kitchen and dining area flowing toward the foyer. A mudroom sits off the kitchen near the garage entry. The 2-car garage fits an SUV with room to spare.
Floor Plan

Upper level holds three bedrooms, a loft, laundry, and a primary suite with a walk-in closet and a private bath. Two secondary bedrooms share access to a full bath. The loft sits centrally, making it flexible as an office or a lounge space.
Editor’s Note: That 8×10 walk-in closet off the primary bath is a practical win on a narrow lot where storage often gets squeezed. The loft placement between the secondary bedrooms and staircase gives it real utility without eating into bedroom square footage. Laundry landing right off the bedrooms, rather than tucked in a basement, keeps daily routines shorter.
Candlelit Farmhouse Dining With Fall Foliage Framed Behind
Dark wood chairs with linen cushions surround a plank-top table set for eight. Autumn color through the windows does the decorating. The black iron candelabra chandelier anchors the whole room.
Autumn color through the windows does the decorating.
Open-Plan Living Where the Kitchen and Sofa Are Actually Friends

Recessed lighting keeps the ceiling clean while two pendant chandeliers anchor the dining zone and kitchen beyond. The gray sofa sits low and casual, letting the wall-mounted TV dominate without any console fighting for attention. Black accents on the coffee table, TV stand, and barstools pull the two spaces together without forcing a match.
Budget Tip: Floating a TV console on the wall instead of using a floor-standing unit frees up visual square footage, which matters most in narrow-lot homes where the living room width is already working against you. It’s an easy swap that costs less than most furniture upgrades and makes cleaning the floor faster, too.
Marble Island, Dark Base, Three Pendant Lights That Mean Business

Pairing white shaker cabinets with a navy island base keeps the palette grounded without feeling cold. That herringbone tile backsplash adds texture where a flat subway would’ve blended in. Four upholstered counter stools with wood legs soften what’s otherwise a pretty hard-edged space.
Quick Fix: Mixing cabinet colors, white perimeter, and a darker island gives your eye a place to land and makes a large kitchen feel less like a showroom. If you’re working with a narrow lot plan, keeping the island base dark draws attention inward rather than outward toward tight walls. It’s a low-cost finish decision with real visual impact.
Corner Windows That Pull Fall Color Straight Into the Home Office

Warm oak desk sits centered against two large windows framing autumn foliage outside.
By The Numbers: Positioning a desk to face corner windows rather than a wall gives you natural light on both sides, which reduces eye strain during long work sessions. Rooms on narrow lots often get one window per wall, so a corner placement like this captures more daylight without adding square footage. It’s one of the more practical layout decisions a builder can make in a smaller footprint.
Loft Living Room That Earns Every Square Foot

Gray upholstered sofas anchor the space without overwhelming it, and the ottoman does double duty as a coffee table. Carpet keeps the loft feeling distinct from the hardwood staircase below. Low-profile furniture choices here aren’t accidental. On a narrow lot, every piece that sits closer to the floor makes the ceiling feel taller.
Style Tip: Choosing sofas with exposed legs instead of skirted bases lets light pass underneath, which makes a loft feel less closed-in without changing a single wall. It’s a small detail that shifts how roomy the whole space reads. Look for leg heights of at least five inches to get the full effect.
Carpet, Gray Bedding, and a White Dresser That Does Real Work

Built-in recessed lighting beats a ceiling fan for keeping sightlines clean in a low-profile bedroom.
Vaulted walls push the ceiling height just enough to give this room breathing room without drama. Two framed botanical prints above the footboard keep the wall from feeling bare. The white dresser runs wide rather than tall, giving the mirror above it room to reflect light back across the carpet.
Bathroom With a Laundry Room Door That Actually Makes Sense

White quartz countertops, a potted fern, and a direct doorway to the washer and dryer make this primary bath genuinely functional, not just pretty.
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Exterior photo shows a two-story farmhouse with red board-and-batten siding, a two-car garage, and a covered entry. The floor plan below reveals a first floor with a family room, kitchen, dining area, office, and mudroom, all oriented around a central stair leading to upper-level bedrooms.
