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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 4,166
- Bedrooms: 5-8
- Bathrooms: 3-5
Floor Plan

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First floor shows great room, dining, kitchen, guest room, office, mudroom, pantry, bath, walk-in closet, stair, and three-car garage.
Floor Plan

Upper level holds an owners suite with two walk-in closets, three additional bedrooms sharing two baths, a laundry room, and a recreation room open to below. Stair and hall connect all spaces efficiently.
Floor Plan
This lower level houses three bedrooms, two full baths, a sprawling family room, and a mechanical room. Bed #1 gets a walk-in closet and private bath. A central stair and hall connect all spaces efficiently.
Editor’s Note: The two secondary bedrooms mirror each other in size at 11'11" x 14'3", which makes it easy to furnish them identically if you're setting up guest rooms or kids' rooms. That shared bath placement between them keeps foot traffic out of the main hall. Don't overlook the mechanical room access, it's tucked neatly beside the baths rather than buried behind living space.
Vertical Shiplap Paneling and a Wall Clock That Actually Commands Attention

Vertical slat paneling runs the full length of the hallway wall, giving the space structure without art. The navy bench keeps it grounded.
History Corner: Vertical wall paneling has roots in 19th-century farmhouse construction, where boards were run floor-to-ceiling to add structural rigidity before drywall existed. Builders eventually kept the look long after the practical need disappeared. Today it's one of the most recognizable signatures of the American farmhouse revival.
Plantation Shutters and Dual Monitors Make This Home Office Work Hard

Plantation shutters wrap two full walls, giving the room a clean, light-filtering shell without heavy drapes. Dark espresso desk cabinetry grounds the space against gray walls. The arc lamp's brass finish pulls unexpectedly warm against the white sofa. A worn Persian-style rug ties both zones together.
Style Tip: Plantation shutters are worth the investment in a home office because you can tilt the louvers to cut glare on screens without losing natural light entirely. Unlike roller shades, they hold their position throughout the day without needing adjustment. That kind of passive light control matters more than most people expect until they've worked a full day without it.
Double-Height Fireplace Wall With Brick Running Straight to the Ceiling

Gray brick climbs the full two-story height without interruption, which makes the fireplace feel architectural rather than decorative. A large-format TV sits above the mantel, flanked by plantation shutters that keep the symmetry tight. The sectional and accent chairs are arranged close enough to the fire to actually use it. Casual and considered at once.
Why the Brick Chimney Works at This Scale
Running the brick all the way to the roofline inside the room solves a common problem in double-height spaces: the upper wall tends to feel empty and disconnected from what's happening below. Brick has enough visual weight to anchor the eye across that full height without needing art or shelving to fill the gap. It also quietly ties the fireplace to the balcony railing above, giving the room a spine.
Open-Plan Dining and Kitchen Where the Backyard Feels Like Part of the Room

Floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors pull the outside in without any architectural gymnastics.
White shaker cabinets run the full length of the kitchen wall, grounded by a dark tile backsplash that keeps things from feeling too bright. The dining table mixes wood with black Windsor-style chairs and upholstered armchairs at the heads, a combination that works because it doesn't try too hard. That arched black display cabinet against the right wall earns its footprint.
Quartz Island With Three Stools and a Dark Tile Backsplash That Pulls It Together

Waterfall-edge quartz on the island anchors the space without competing with the herringbone tile behind the range. Black metal stools keep the seating casual. Stainless appliances and a built-in range hood give the cooking wall a professional feel without overstating it.
Four-Poster Frame and a Vaulted Ceiling That Gives the Room Room to Breathe

Vaulted ceilings paired with a wood four-poster bed keep the scale from feeling hollow. The navy tufted bench grounds the foot of the bed without competing with the patterned rug beneath it.
Blue Board-and-Batten Exterior With a Big Glass Corner and a Brick Chimney Stack

Slate-blue lap siding wraps the rear elevation, broken up by white trim that keeps each window grouping crisp. That large upper-corner glass section suggests a primary suite or open loft with serious natural light. Down at grade, a simple concrete patio hosts a wood dining set without much ceremony.
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Exterior rendering of a blue Craftsman farmhouse paired with a first-floor plan showing garage, great room, kitchen, and guest suite.
