
Everyone has been inside a barn that became something else — a wedding, a reunion, a summer afternoon at a relative’s place where the ceilings went up forever and nobody wanted to leave. The Sycamore Way is built around that feeling, with a vaulted loft overlooking the main living space, a layout wide enough for the holiday table with all its leaves, and five bedrooms for the people who stick around after dinner.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,921
- Bedrooms: 5
- Bathrooms: 4.5
Floor Plan

Single-story layout with primary suite, two bedrooms, great room, and three-car garage.
Floor Plan

The upper level packs in three bedrooms, two full baths, a walk-in closet, and the vaulted loft — all within a 57-by-32-foot footprint. An open-below section keeps the right side from feeling boxed in, while bedrooms 4 and 5 anchor the left wing with shared bath access close by.
Dark Board-and-Batten Meets Stone Base on a Covered Wraparound Porch Built for Staying a While
Vertical dark siding against white-trimmed windows and a stone foundation is a combination that photographs well and weathers better. Warm porch light spills out even in daylight — the kind of detail that signals a house people actually live in hard, not one staged for a listing.
Gold Range Hood, Marble Backsplash, and a Loft That Watches Over It All

Warm oak floors run continuously through the living, dining, and kitchen zones, which does more for cohesion than any paint color could. At either end of the space, the brass range hood and the round gold dining table pull their weight in equal measure — different functions, same visual register.
Did You Know: Double-height ceilings like this one can make a room harder to heat in winter because warm air rises and pools near the top. Running ceiling fans on low-speed clockwise rotation pushes that air back down without creating a draft — a small adjustment that makes a genuine difference in both comfort and what you spend on heating.
Black Granite, White Cabinets, and a Round Table That Says Stay a While

A striped circular rug anchors the dining area while bar seating pulls double duty at the dark-topped island. The two zones share the same floor space without competing for it.
Ask Yourself: Round dining tables tend to generate more conversation than rectangular ones because no seat reads as the head. If your family actually lingers after meals, it’s worth asking whether your current table shape is working with that habit or quietly working against it.
Stainless Hood, Black Granite Island, and a Loft Rail That Overlooks Every Meal

That loft railing isn’t decorative — someone up there has a front-row seat to everything happening in this kitchen.
Dark granite on white shaker cabinets is a pairing that holds up because it doesn’t try too hard. The wall-mounted range hood pulls the eye upward toward the mezzanine, which is where the room earns its drama. Two low-backed stools tuck under the island’s overhang — closer to counter height than bar height, for what it’s worth. The fridge sits just far enough from the island that two people can actually work the kitchen at the same time.
Pendant Light, Gray Linen, and Afternoon Sun Writing Patterns Across the Wall

Afternoon light through sheer curtains throws leaf shadows across gray walls — the kind of thing you can’t style, it just happens. Gold lamp bases on both nightstands add warmth without asking for attention. And the circular pendant centered above the headboard isn’t just there to look good; it actually functions as a reading light.
Quick Fix: Pendant lights hung above the headboard are a practical swap for table lamps if your nightstands are small or perpetually buried. Just make sure the bottom of the shade lands roughly at seated eye level so it lights your book without shining directly at your partner.
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The exterior rendering shows a board-and-batten barndominium with a three-car garage, paired with the first-floor plan — primary suite, two additional bedrooms, an office, great room, pantry, and covered porches on two sides.
