
Families who’ve outgrown a starter home almost always say the same thing: they needed more space two years before they finally admitted it — backyard birthday parties crammed onto a concrete slab, homework spread across the only table, a third school pickup behind you and dinner still not started. The Ashford Row is built around exactly that turning point, with a covered patio that extends the kitchen into the yard, an open main floor that absorbs the after-school surge, and a two-story layout that puts the bedrooms where the noise isn’t.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 7,632
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 3
Floor Plan

Four identical units each feature a great room, kitchen with pantry, dining area, office or fourth bedroom, mudroom, single-car garage, covered front porch, and a rear covered patio.
Floor Plan

The upper floor repeats across all four units: master bedroom with sitting area, two secondary bedrooms, shared bath, laundry, and covered patio access.
Dark Green Built-Ins Make the Fireplace Wall Do Double Duty
Olive-painted shelving flanks a shiplap fireplace surround, with a veined black marble coffee table grounding the seating area below.
Style Tip: Painting built-in shelving a deep, saturated color like forest green draws the eye inward and makes the wall read as intentional rather than incidental. Keep the styling sparse — the color should carry the weight, not the objects. Odd-numbered groupings at varying heights give the shelves enough structure without tipping into staged.
Sage Green Island, Brass Faucet, and Three Pendant Lights That Actually Fit the Space

That bridge faucet is doing a lot of work for a kitchen island this size.
The sage green base cabinet grounds the island without competing with the cream perimeter cabinetry, and the pendant scale actually looks right — which isn’t something you can take for granted in a townhome kitchen.
Rattan Pendant, Round Oak Table, and a Bowl of Lemons That Earn Their Place

Warm oak grain on a round pedestal table, dark-framed chairs, and natural light pouring in from the sliding door. The lemons are doing their job too.
Why It Works: Round tables earn their footprint in open-plan dining spaces because they don’t create a “head of the table” dynamic, which makes everyday meals feel less ceremonial. Near a patio door, round also tends to leave more clearance for foot traffic on all sides — no corner catching someone on the way out back. It’s a practical reason the shape keeps showing up in family-focused floor plans like this one.
Leather-Wrapped Bed Frame and Oak Nightstands That Make the Room Feel Complete

Brown leather panels on the bed frame give the room its grounding material. Matching oak nightstands keep the flanking symmetry from feeling stiff, while gray layered bedding and two framed botanical prints above the headboard finish the space without crowding it.
Designer’s Secret: Ceiling fans with longer blade spans move more air at lower speeds, keeping the room quieter at night. Between a flush-mount and a downrod model, the downrod pulls warm air down from a tray ceiling more efficiently — a functional detail most people don’t think about until their first summer in the house.
Dark Green Vanity Cabinets and Brass Hardware That Make the Bathroom Feel Finished

Forest green cabinetry paired with brass faucets keeps the double vanity from reading as generic. Two sconces per sink means no one’s squinting into their own shadow.
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Top half shows the exterior of a four-unit modern farmhouse townhome row with white board-and-batten siding, dark metal roofing, and individual garages. Below, the first-floor plan reveals each unit shares an identical layout: a 13×16 great room, kitchen with pantry, dining space, office or fourth bedroom, mudroom, and covered patio out back.
