
A three-car garage shop tells you exactly who picked this floor plan — one of them has a project on the workbench, and the other has claimed the covered patio as the place where the weekend actually happens: morning coffee before the heat, grilling after a long Saturday, the citronella candle that never quite makes it back inside. The Crestline is built around both of them, with the garage shop, covered patio, open living flow, and a single-story layout that keeps everything close without anyone stepping on anyone else’s thing.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,199
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

The primary suite sits privately at the top left with its own bath and walk-in closet, well separated from bedrooms 2 and 3, which share Bath 2 at the opposite end of the house. Kitchen, dining, and living flow openly through the center — no walls chopping it up — and a mudroom, pantry, and laundry cluster near the 3-car garage shop entry, which is exactly where you want them after a long afternoon in the shop.
Stucco and Stone Front Where the Driveway Earns Its Keep

River rock cuts a path to the entry, flanked by clipped boxwood spheres that stay tidy without trying too hard. White stucco wraps the main volume, broken up on the right side by a wood-panel accent that keeps the facade from reading as a blank box. Dark window frames do the grounding work. The whole thing is clean geometry without tipping into cold.
River rock cuts a path to the entry, flanked by clipped boxwood spheres that stay tidy without trying too hard.
Warm Wood, Tan Linen, and One Very Good Orange Coffee Table
Shot from above, the living area shows two oversized linen sofas arranged around a low square coffee table finished in burnt orange lacquer — a bold call that actually pays off here. Dappled light cuts across the hardwood floor. Red bar stools at the kitchen island echo the color without piling on, which is harder to pull off than it looks.
Material Matters: Bamboo or engineered hardwood like what’s shown here holds up well in open-plan spaces where foot traffic runs continuously between kitchen and living areas. The warm honey tone works because it reads neutral against both the tan upholstery and the orange coffee table — it’s not competing, just connecting. If you’re refinishing existing floors, go satin finish: it picks up light without broadcasting every scuff the way high-gloss does.
Black Granite, Red Stools, and a Kitchen Island That Does Real Work

The overhead view reveals a double-basin white sink dropped into dark granite with visible mineral flecking throughout. Red tulip-style bar stools line the island on the seating side, and a gas cooktop runs along the perimeter counter beneath a stainless wall-mount hood. Everything is oriented so the cook isn’t facing a wall.
Worth Knowing: Black granite with heavy mineral flecking shows water spots and fingerprints more readily than honed finishes do — a daily wipe with a microfiber cloth handles most of it, and sealant touch-ups once a year keep the surface from absorbing oils. The white undermount sink creates strong visual contrast against the dark stone, but it requires consistent attention near the drain to prevent staining over time.
Brass Sconces, a Barn Door, and Bedding That Actually Looks Slept In

Warm linen curtains diffuse natural light without blocking it — a small distinction that matters a lot in a bedroom. The low-profile upholstered bed sits on a textured wool rug, with matching brass pendant sconces mounted on either side and a camel pouf at the foot. Nothing in here is shouting.
Ask Yourself: Wall-mounted sconces give your nightstand surface back — no lamp base eating up half the space. If your nightstands are on the narrow side, that trade-off matters more than most people expect until they’ve actually tried it. Think about whether your current setup leaves room for a book, a glass of water, and nothing else.
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The exterior rendering shows a single-story contemporary with white stucco, dark roof planes, and wood accent panels. Below it, the floor plan lays out three bedrooms, a primary suite with private bath, open kitchen and living, and a 3-car garage shop that spans nearly 40 feet across the back — enough room for two vehicles and a serious workbench setup with space left over.
