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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,952
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

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This single-story layout fits four bedrooms, a study, and open-concept living into a smart footprint. The kitchen, dining, and living room connect naturally at the center. Bed #1 gets vault ceilings and a private bath. Dual porches front and back add outdoor access without eating into interior square footage.
Framed Art Turns a Simple Hallway Into Something Worth Walking Through

Two framed paintings hang on the right wall, recognizable as Van Gogh’s Starry Night and what appears to be a Cézanne landscape. Warm hardwood floors run the length of the corridor, pulling the eye toward a dark charcoal front door at the far end. It’s a simple layout that doesn’t need much else.
Warm Wood Floors and Two Club Chairs That Actually Invite You to Sit
Sunlight hits the hardwood at an angle that makes the whole room feel warmer than it probably is.
White club chairs face each other near the window wall, grounded by a patterned rug. The wood dresser under the wall-mounted TV adds warmth without competing with the light walls. It’s a low-key setup that’s easy to live in.
Sunlit Open Plan With a View Worth Orienting Your Furniture Toward

Oversized black-framed windows pull the backyard’s tree line right into the room. Sunlight hits the area rug hard enough to wash out its botanical pattern by midday. Club chairs face the glass instead of the sofa, which gets the arrangement exactly right.
Try This: Swap out bar stools with mismatched heights for a matched set at consistent seat height so the counter reads as intentional rather than collected over time. It’s a small fix that ties the kitchen into the open plan without touching a single cabinet.
Marble-Veined Island and Iron Barstools That Mean Business

Gray-veined granite wraps the island and perimeter counters, tying together white shaker cabinets and a stainless French-door fridge with a walk-in pantry just steps away.
Budget Tip: Granite remnants from stone yards often sell for a fraction of slab pricing and can cover an island countertop without touching your cabinet budget. Ask your fabricator about remnant availability before getting a full slab quote.
Compact Home Office With a Door Worth Noticing

Dark panel doors with sidelights pull natural light into a small room that could easily feel closed off. The X-base desk keeps the footprint light, and the pair of swivel chairs across from it makes the space function as both a workspace and a place to have an actual conversation. Wood floors warm the whole thing up.
Ask Yourself: If your home office doubles as a meeting or sitting room, consider how the seating faces the door. Visitors who enter and immediately face a wall feel like an afterthought. Orienting chairs toward the entry makes the room read as welcoming rather than purely functional.
Paired Club Chairs and a Round Table That Earn Their Place in a Bedroom

Soft linen upholstery on both chairs holds the room’s warmth without competing with the patterned coverlet on the bed. Natural wood runs through every piece, from the nightstands to the small round table between the chairs. It reads coordinated without feeling like a showroom set.
Why That Round Table Works So Well Here
Round tables between chairs avoid the stiff, waiting-room feel that rectangular coffee tables create in bedroom seating areas. Without corners to navigate, the space between the chairs stays open and approachable. If you’re placing a similar table, look for one with a lower shelf, the way this one is built, so you get surface space without visual bulk.
Clawfoot Tub and Dual Vanities With Countertops That Do the Heavy Lifting

Marble-veined countertops run the length of both vanities, pairing with round mirrors that keep the room from feeling too formal. The clawfoot tub sits centered against a tiled shower wall, giving it real presence without competing with the rest of the room. Penny tile underfoot adds subtle texture where you’d least expect it.
In The Details: Clawfoot tubs have a higher floor footprint than built-in soaking tubs, so placement matters more than it seems. Centering one on a feature wall rather than tucking it in a corner lets it read as intentional rather than an afterthought. It’s a positioning decision that costs nothing but changes how the whole room feels.
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Exterior rendering of a modern farmhouse with board-and-batten siding paired with a full floor plan showing four bedrooms, dual porches, open living, and a two-car garage.
