
🔥 Would you like to save this?
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,674
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

In order to come up with the very specific design ideas, we create most designs with the assistance of state-of-the-art AI interior design software. Also, assume links that take you off the site are affiliate links such as links to Amazon. this means we may earn a commission if you buy something.
Single-story layout features four bedrooms, a great room, an open kitchen with an island, a rear covered porch, an outdoor kitchen, a mudroom, and a three-car garage split into separate bays.
Covered Patio and Pool Deck Built for Long Summer Afternoons

Board-and-batten gable anchors the rear elevation above white brick wings. Two chaise lounges face the rectangular pool, with a spa tucked to one side.
Three features that make this outdoor setup work:
- Covered patio keeps furniture shaded during peak afternoon heat
- Raised spa connects directly to the pool without eating into deck space
- Stone pavers extend past the pool edge, giving room to walk without crowding the water
Gray Brick Fireplace Tower That Earns Every Inch of Wall Space
Floor-to-ceiling brick stack flanked by dark built-ins anchors the room. White sofa, slate armchairs, and leather poufs keep the seating arrangement grounded without competing.
Style Math: Gray brick paired with dark olive cabinetry and a wood mantel is the combo at work here. The white sofa and natural oak floors pull the palette back before it gets too heavy. It’s a lesson in letting one bold material do the talking.
Silver Pendants and a Waterfall Island Built for a Crowd

Chrome dome pendants hang low over a white quartz island with four barstools.
History Corner: Kitchen islands became mainstream in American homes during the 1980s, when open-concept layouts started replacing closed galley kitchens. Before that shift, most residential kitchens kept prep and dining spaces strictly divided. The island format borrowed from commercial kitchen logic, where a central worktable kept cooks from bumping into each other.
Tufted Chairs and a Pedestal Table That Make the Room Feel Earned

Cream tufted dining chairs with nailhead trim anchor a dark walnut pedestal table set for six. The mirrored sideboard bounces light without adding visual weight. Abstract art in black frames ties the warm wood tones together without matching too perfectly.
The Psychology Behind This: Warm wood tones and soft neutrals in dining spaces tend to lower perceived stress and slow the pace of eating, which encourages longer meals and more conversation. Designers have long used this pairing to make formal rooms feel approachable rather than ceremonial.
Leaf Prints, a Console Table, and an Entryway That Actually Does Its Job

Nine botanical prints arranged in a tight grid anchor the entry without competing for attention. Below them, a farmhouse-style console table holds a lamp and a small plant, while a woven basket on the lower shelf catches the kind of clutter that usually ends up on the floor. The diamond-pattern rug ties it together quietly.
Style Tip: Entryway console tables work best when they hold both something decorative and something functional. A lamp, a small tray for keys, and one basket underneath covers most of what you’ll need the moment you walk through the door. Keep the surface edited so it doesn’t become a drop zone by the end of the first week.
Vaulted Ceiling, Tufted Headboard, and a View of Open Fields

Tall vaulted ceilings with an exposed wood beam give this bedroom real vertical presence. White tufted upholstery on the headboard keeps things soft without going precious. Three black-framed prints above the bed and black window frames outdoors hold the palette in check.
Why It Works: Tufted upholstered headboards have made a sustained comeback because they muffle sound and add insulation between the sleeper and the wall. In rooms with high ceilings, a tall headboard also helps anchor the bed so it doesn’t get swallowed by the vertical space above it.
Freestanding Soaking Tub Set Against Subway Tile and Veined Marble

Freestanding tubs placed away from the wall used to signal luxury. Now they’re showing up in mid-range builds, and this room shows why.
The floor-mount tub filler puts the controls right where they need to be. Hexagonal tile underfoot and white subway brick behind the tub give the room two different textures without fighting each other.
Pin It

A rendered exterior shows a white brick European ranch with dark rooflines, board-and-batten accents, and a circular driveway. Below it, the floor plan lays out four bedrooms, a vaulted master suite, two garages, a rear porch with an outdoor kitchen, and a great room anchored by a 16-foot glass wall with sliding doors.
