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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 3,092
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 4.5
Floor Plan

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The main floor centers on an open living, dining, and kitchen zone with vaulted ceilings and a double-sided fireplace. Two breezeways connect the main house to an attached garage. The left wing holds a master suite, second bedroom, mudroom, laundry, and full bath. A large rear deck expands outdoor living considerably.
Floor Plan

Upper level splits into two mirrored bedroom suites flanking a central open-to-below great room. Each suite includes a full bath, a walk-in closet, and breezeway access with bench seating.
Smoke Rising from a Stone Chimney Anchors This Forest Retreat
Dark wood siding, black standing-seam roofing, and a tall stone chimney give this aerial view real visual weight against the trees.
Vaulted Beams and a Stone Fireplace Define This Open-Concept Great Room

Exposed wood ceiling beams draw the eye up to a cathedral peak, where a triangular clerestory window floods the space with light. Below, olive cabinetry and a marble island anchor the kitchen end.
Style Tip: When ceilings climb this high, pendant lights often feel lost. Hanging them low over an island, as shown here, pulls the scale back down and keeps the kitchen feeling livable rather than cavernous. Stone fireplace surrounds work especially well in tall rooms because they have enough vertical mass to hold their own against the height.
Vaulted Ceilings and Floor-to-Ceiling Glass Pull the Forest Inside

Warm wood beams cross a cathedral ceiling while globe pendants drop low enough to anchor the seating area. Gray sectional, oval coffee table, green accent chairs.
The Psychology Behind This: Rooms with unobstructed views to greenery tend to lower perceived stress faster than rooms with art alone. It’s why the furniture here faces the glass rather than a focal wall. Nature does the decorating.
Linen Bedding and a Stone Accent Wall Give This Bedroom Its Quiet Weight

Natural wood bed frame, macramé wall hanging, and floor-to-ceiling glass frame a forest view from the bed.
Fun Fact: Macramé has been used as a textile art for centuries, with roots in 13th-century Arabic weaving traditions. It found its way into bedrooms and living spaces during the 1970s boho revival and never fully left. Pairing it with concrete or stone, as shown here, keeps it from reading as purely nostalgic.
Rainfall Shower and Marble Vanity Make This Bathroom Worth Lingering In

Black matte fixtures contrast against white subway tile, while a wood-grain vanity with open shelving keeps the space grounded and functional.
Color Story: Mixing black matte hardware with warm wood tones is one of the more reliable ways to avoid a bathroom that reads as either too cold or too rustic. The marble slab countertop here does the bridging work, carrying both cool and warm undertones depending on the light. Stone surfaces like this also tend to age well, developing character rather than showing wear.
Integrated Laundry and Wardrobe Storage Belong in the Same Corridor

Light ash cabinetry runs floor to ceiling on both sides, with a hanging rod tucked under upper cabinets and a washer panel left slightly open below a marble countertop. Compact and purposeful.
Why the Hanging Rod Placement Works Here
Positioning a hanging rod directly above a laundry counter means clothes move from the machine to the hanger without crossing the room. It’s a small logistical decision that makes a mudroom or utility corridor far easier to live with daily. Integrated LED lighting under the upper cabinet keeps the hanging zone visible without a separate fixture.
Recessed Lighting and a Dark Sectional Door Make This Garage Feel Intentional

Four-panel sectional door in near-black contrasts sharply against the polished concrete floor. Recessed ceiling lights keep the space bright without hardware clutter. A pedestrian door with full glazing on the right lets in outside light even when the main door stays closed.
By The Numbers: Garage door openers have evolved considerably, with belt-drive systems now running significantly quieter than older chain-drive models. That matters more in attached garages, where mechanical noise travels directly into living spaces. Insulated sectional doors like this one also help regulate interior temperature year-round.
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Exterior photo shows a modern ranch-style home with twin gabled wings, vertical wood siding, and a standing-seam metal roof set against a forest backdrop. Below, the floor plans reveal a two-story layout with four bedrooms, two breezeways flanking an open living and dining core, a rear deck, and an attached garage.
