
Everyone has been inside a house like this at least once: tall ceilings, a staircase visible from the front door, rooms that felt open-ended enough to become whatever the family needed next. This plan leans into that spirit with a New American Traditional exterior, an open main-floor layout, and a bonus space that expands as life does.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,092
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

First-floor layout features master bed, family room, study, kitchen with pantry, and two-car garage.
Floor Plan – Second Floor

Upstairs, you get three bedrooms, a master suite with its own bath, and two secondary rooms sharing a full hall bath. The expandable bonus space off Bed 2 is the sleeper feature here — it can stay unfinished until you need it, then become whatever that moment calls for. Two open-below voids keep the upper floor visually connected to the main level, and covered porches bookend both ends of the layout.
Vaulted Ceilings and a Live Fire Make This Living Room Hard to Leave
That fireplace surround is doing something interesting — the dark veined stone reads almost purple against the white mantel, which shouldn’t work as well as it does. Cathedral ceilings give the room genuine breathing room, and the oversized sectional pulls it back to earth without fighting for attention.
White Cabinets and Black Hardware Pull This Kitchen Into Focus

A farmhouse sink and matte black faucet sit below two glass pendants, with granite counters running the length of the prep zone.
By The Numbers: White shaker cabinets stay popular because they genuinely work with almost any hardware finish or countertop material — they’re a neutral that actually behaves like one. The black pulls here create contrast without demanding a full two-tone cabinet scheme, which keeps the budget and the visual noise in check. Subway tile on the backsplash keeps the walls quiet so the stainless appliances can carry their own weight.
Warm Wood Tones and Natural Light Turn This Home Office Into a Place You’ll Actually Want to Work

Sunlight does a lot of the heavy lifting here.
Two oversized windows flood the room, and the rich walnut desk anchors the space without crowding it. The corner bookcase reads less like decoration and more like it gets actual use — every shelf is full. A few potted plants on and beside the desk are the only thing standing between this room and feeling like a corporate conference call backdrop, and they’re pulling their weight.
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Exterior rendering of a craftsman-style farmhouse sits above a color-coded first-floor plan showing the master bedroom, family room, study, kitchen, and two-car garage.
History Corner: Board-and-batten siding, visible across this home’s exterior, goes back to 19th-century American barn construction. Wide boards covered the exterior walls, and narrower strips sealed the gaps between them — practical, not decorative. It migrated into residential architecture over time and became deeply tied to rural building traditions across the South and Midwest before eventually landing on every farmhouse-style new build in the country.
