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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,419
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

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First floor puts the primary suite beside a large great room, with dining, kitchen, mud room, and dual porches completing the layout.
Floor Plan

Two bedrooms share the second floor with a walk-in closet and two full bathrooms between them. One bedroom measures 11×11, the other 10-8×12. Both have 8-foot ceilings. A staircase connects down to the main level. The future bonus bedroom adds 191 square feet of optional space, already roughed in with its own door.
Herringbone Fireplace Surround Anchors an Open-Concept Living Space
Built-in shelving flanks a fireplace clad in herringbone tile, with a mounted TV sitting above the mantel. Gray upholstered seating clusters around a wood-and-iron coffee table on a printed rug. Behind it, black pendant lights drop over a kitchen island, keeping the open layout connected without feeling like one big room.
Rustic Dining Table Holds Its Own Against a Modern Sputnik Chandelier

Reclaimed wood grain on the dining table contrasts with dark painted chairs and a globe-cluster pendant overhead. Wainscoting wraps the walls in classic paneling. Beyond the arched openings, a wet bar with a wine fridge and staircase hint at how much house sits behind this room.
Ask Yourself: Could your dining room handle two distinct lighting personalities? Here, an industrial chandelier and recessed cans coexist without competing. It’s worth asking whether your current fixture is doing too much work alone.
Marble Island Pulls Double Duty as Dining Table in This Farmhouse Kitchen

Black pendant lights hang low over a waterfall-edge island that seats six. White shaker cabinets pair with a gray wood range hood, and light hardwood floors keep the whole space from feeling heavy.
Designer’s Secret: Combining the kitchen island and dining table into one surface saves square footage, but it only works if the island is deep enough to allow comfortable knee clearance on all sides. Most standard islands fall short. Aim for at least 42 inches of depth if you want chairs to feel like chairs and not afterthoughts.
Vaulted Ceiling with Exposed Trusses Gives This Master Bedroom Real Volume

Wood ceiling trusses and a six-blade fan draw the eye upward in this master suite. The contrast between the dark dresser and the white media console keeps the neutral palette from feeling flat.
Did You Know: Vaulted ceilings with exposed trusses are a signature of farmhouse-style architecture, but they do more than add visual height. The open structure creates natural airflow channels, which can help a ceiling fan work more efficiently in warm months.
Dual Vanities and a Soaking Tub Make This Master Bath Worth the Square Footage

Warm walnut cabinetry grounds both vanities while white marble countertops keep the palette light. Matte black faucets and drawer pulls tie the two sides together. An open doorway leads directly into the walk-in closet, making the morning routine genuinely efficient.
Material Matters: Marble countertops vary widely in porosity, so sealing them at least once a year helps prevent staining from everyday products like toothpaste and hand soap. Honed finishes hide etching better than polished ones, which makes them a practical choice for high-use vanity surfaces.
Utility rooms often get overlooked, but this laundry space shows what’s possible when you treat it like any other room in the house.
Patterned Floor Tile and Subway Walls Give This Laundry Room Real Character

Geometric black-and-white floor tile does most of the heavy lifting here. Upper cabinets in oak finish match the lower cabinetry, and the matte countertop keeps things grounded without competing with the busy floor.
Staircase Runner and Iron Railings Set the Tone for the Whole Entry

Patterned carpet runners on white-painted risers split the difference between formal and casual without committing to either.
Patterned carpet runners on white-painted risers split the difference between formal and casual without committing to either.
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Exterior photo shows a white farmhouse with dual porches and a dormer window. The first-floor plan below details 1,802 square feet with a primary suite, great room, and open kitchen.
Try This: On a plan this size, putting the primary suite on the main floor is a practical long-term choice. It keeps the bedroom accessible without stairs, which matters more as households age. If you’re building new, it’s worth asking your designer how that placement affects resale appeal too.
