
Multi-generational living has quietly stopped being a last resort — it shows up now in how people actually shop for floor plans, especially when the in-laws already have a moving date. The Rosewood Place is built around exactly that reality: single-story flow, a wet bar that earns its keep on football Sundays and long holiday weekends, and enough separation between bedrooms that the arrangement can work on everyone’s terms.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,350
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

All three bedrooms and the master suite share one wing, with the great room anchoring the center of the plan. The kitchen opens into a breakfast nook and mud room near the garage entry, a study sits just off the foyer, and covered patio access flows directly from the great room.
Floor Plan – Basement

The lower level holds two bedrooms, a shared bath, the wet bar, a large living room, and two unfinished storage areas that give you room to grow into the space.
Covered Porch at Dusk, Columns Lit From Above
Stone-base columns anchor the covered porch while recessed lighting throws warm amber across the ceiling. Large picture windows reveal a glowing interior behind them. The tapered column silhouettes are distinctly Craftsman in character, and the outdoor chairs tucked under the overhang suggest this porch actually gets used rather than just photographed.
Material Matters: Board-and-batten cladding on the gable face pairs with stucco siding below because each material handles weather exposure differently — the batten profile sheds water at the top, while stucco holds up well on sheltered vertical surfaces. Stone veneer at the column bases isn’t decorative filler. It protects high-contact areas from moisture and impact better than stucco alone.
Dark Leather and Raw Wood Living in the Same Room Without Fighting

Hickory floors run beneath a leather sofa with wood trim, grounding a room where the kitchen’s bronze tile backsplash pulls everything together.
Hickory floors run beneath a leather sofa with wood trim, grounding a room where the kitchen’s bronze tile backsplash pulls everything together.
Stacked Stone to the Ceiling Earns Every Inch of That Wall

Ledgestone doesn’t usually run floor to ceiling, but when it does, it owns the room.
The chimney chase becomes the room’s architectural anchor, with a wood mantel shelf interrupting all that stacked stone just enough to give your eye a place to land. Dark velvet chairs and leather sofas aren’t competing here — they’re pulling in the same direction. Natural wood floors and the window trim do the work of keeping the whole thing from reading too heavy.
Olive Tile and Dark Cabinets Doing the Heavy Lifting Back There

A stainless range hood anchors the backsplash wall where olive-green subway tile runs from the countertop all the way to the upper cabinets. Dark espresso cabinetry keeps the palette grounded, and the granite countertops — veining and all — carry that contrast right onto the island.
Worth Knowing: Pendant lights hung at staggered heights over an island are one of the more common kitchen design mistakes out there. They should hang at a consistent height — roughly 30 to 36 inches above the counter surface — so your sightlines across the kitchen stay clear and the whole thing doesn’t look accidental.
Dark Vanity Cabinets and a Doorless Shower That Actually Works

Granite countertop with visible movement pairs with dark espresso cabinetry and brushed nickel pulls. A mosaic tile backsplash behind the vanity adds texture without competing with anything. The walk-in shower runs floor-to-ceiling in large-format tile with a rainfall head — no door to squeegee, no track to scrub.
Budget Tip: Prefabricated granite vanity tops cost significantly less than custom slabs cut to size, and once installed you genuinely won’t notice the difference. If your countertop overhang is standard, check home improvement stores for remnant pieces before calling a fabricator — remnants are often priced well below a custom quote for the same material.
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Exterior shot at dusk shows a Craftsman ranch with stone accents and a 3-car garage. The floor plan below lays out 2,350 square feet with three bedrooms, a study, and covered patio access off the great room.
