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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,961
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

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The main floor puts the great room, dining, and kitchen in an open arrangement at the center, with the kitchen connecting directly to a deck. Entry flows through a foyer past a powder room and mech room. A mudroom with coat storage links the living area to the two-car garage. Typical ceiling height runs 10 feet.
Floor Plan

The upper floor holds four bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a laundry closet. Vault ceilings appear throughout. The primary bedroom connects directly to a walk-in closet and an ensuite with a separate shower.
Floor Plan
Basement layout splits into two clear zones: a 599 SF suite with a living area, bedroom, kitchen, and bath, plus 288 SF of unfinished space beneath the garage slab. The flex room and mechanical room sit along the east wall. Nine-foot ceilings run through the suite, and a tub-and-shower combo anchors the bath.
Rounded Wood Knobs and Textured Wallcovering Make This Entry Feel Considered

Woven grasscloth wallcovering sets the right tone before guests even sit down. Round wood knobs keep things casual rather than formal. Light hardwood flooring and an upholstered bench with tufted detailing round out a drop zone that actually works.
Common Mistake: Mounting coat hooks without a bench underneath is one of the most common entry mistakes. Dropped bags and shoes end up on the floor anyway, making the space feel cluttered fast. A bench positioned directly below the hooks keeps the whole system working together.
Warm Neutrals and a Live Fireplace Make This Living Room Work Hard

Creamy bouclé sofa anchors the seating area while a cognac leather chair pulls in just enough warmth to keep it from reading flat. The fireplace surround stays minimal, so the TV mount above doesn’t feel crowded. Floor-to-ceiling linen drapes frame a tree-lined view that does more decorating than any accessory could.
Trend Alert: Layering two circular coffee tables at different heights is gaining traction as an alternative to the standard rectangular centerpiece. It improves traffic flow around deep sectionals and gives you a flexible surface area without committing to a single oversized piece. Boucle and natural wood combinations are driving this softer, tactile direction in living room design.
Open-Plan Living Where the Fireplace and Floor Do the Heavy Lifting

Light wood flooring runs uninterrupted from the dining area into the living room, making the two zones feel connected without a wall between them. A lit fireplace anchors the seating area more effectively than the TV mounted above it. That high chair tucked beside the dining table is a good reminder that good design has to work for real life.
Style Tip: Open-plan layouts can make furniture placement feel arbitrary without a clear anchor point. A fireplace solves that problem in the living zone, but the dining area needs its own focal point too. Art hung at eye level behind the table, as seen here, gives the space a back wall that doesn’t rely on a door or window to define it.
Wishbone Bar Stools and a Wood Island Base Anchor This Kitchen Without Competing

Natural wood tones on the island base balance white shaker cabinets without fighting them. Glass pendants keep the overhead lighting from feeling heavy. Counter seating for four earns its space.
Glass pendants keep the overhead lighting from feeling heavy.
Warm Wood Panels and a Rattan Pendant Give This Primary Bedroom Real Presence

Tall paneling behind the bed does real work here, adding depth without requiring art or wallpaper. Soft carpet, an upholstered platform bed, and a woven pendant keep every material in the same tonal family. Two doorways visible in the background suggest direct access to both a bathroom and a nursery.
- Paneled accent walls behind the bed eliminate the need for a headboard entirely
- Rattan or woven pendants soften overhead light better than bare glass shades in rooms with high ceilings
- Keeping nightstand lamps and pendants in the same warm-white range prevents competing color temperatures at night
Moving deeper into the primary suite, the bathroom picks up where the bedroom left off with clean lines and warm wood tones.
Floating Vanity and Black Hardware Keep This Primary Bath Grounded

Light oak cabinetry floats off the floor, pairing black pulls with matching faucets for hardware consistency rarely seen at this price point.
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Exterior rendering shows a craftsman-style two-story home with shingle siding, while the floor plan below details the main level’s open kitchen, great room, dining area, two-car garage, and covered entry.
By The Numbers: Garage square footage on this plan clocks in at 406 square feet, which is separate from the 886-square-foot main floor area. Buyers often overlook garage square footage when comparing plans, but it meaningfully affects the total footprint and lot coverage requirements. The total main floor area here reaches 1,292 square feet before you factor in upper levels or the finished basement.
