
The thing that sells a floor plan is rarely the floor plan — it’s slow mornings in a porch chair before the day starts, a late afternoon that drifts outside without deciding to, a wraparound that means there’s always a good side of the house to be on. The Fernhollow delivers all of that: a modern farmhouse exterior that sits easy on any lot, a single-story layout that keeps everything close, and a price point that doesn’t ask you to compromise on the parts that matter.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,801
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

The single-story layout opens the family room, eat-in kitchen, and living room into one shared run, while a private primary suite and two additional bedrooms stay tucked away — and wraparound porch access means the outdoors is never more than a few steps from anywhere inside.
Cedar Siding, Stone Chimney, and Vineyard Views That Actually Earn the Price Tag

Vertical cedar cladding weathers to a warm gray-blonde that reads differently at dawn than it does at midday — one of those material choices that gets better over time rather than just aging out. The limestone chimney stack anchors the covered patio, where wicker sectional seating faces the rows of vines beyond. Boxwood hedges keep the gravel forecourt from feeling unfinished. Real materials, clean lines, nothing trying too hard.
Stone Fireplace, Boucle Chairs, and Views That Do Most of the Decorating
Stacked limestone runs floor to ceiling beside a gas fireplace, and the scale of it stops the room from feeling like a catalog spread. Two boucle accent chairs with wood frames anchor the near end while cream sofas face the vineyard through black-framed windows. When the view is doing that much work, the furniture can afford to stay quiet.
Marble Island, Fluted Hood, and a Kitchen That Knows What It’s Doing

Light oak cabinetry runs floor to ceiling, and the fluted range hood curves at the top in a shape that draws your eye upward without making a scene about it. Brass hardware and a pot filler keep the cooking zone properly functional. That marble waterfall island earns its place — and honestly, in a kitchen this considered, it would look wrong without it.
Budget Tip: Fluted wood panels on a range hood look custom but can be DIY’d with standard MDF strips and a router. If you’re building new, ask your cabinet maker to wrap the hood in the same flat-panel oak as the cabinetry — it reads as one cohesive unit and saves you a separate millwork quote.
Sliding Glass, a Lit Fireplace Outside, and Vineyard Views From Bed

Waking up to rows of grapevines isn’t a design choice you can fake.
The sliding glass wall pulls the outdoor fireplace and patio directly into the bedroom’s sightline, so the room has a calm that no amount of styling alone could manufacture. Linen bedding, a wood platform base, and a fiddle-leaf fig in a terracotta pot keep things grounded without tipping into fussiness. Simple works here because the architecture is doing the heavy lifting.
Brass Fixtures, Marble Walls, and a Soaking Tub Worth Planning a Morning Around

Gold-toned hardware ties together two vanity stations and a glass-enclosed wet room without tipping into excess. Wall sconces with fabric shades soften what could easily read as cold marble and chrome. Behind the glass, a freestanding soaking tub sits against full-height marble tile — the kind of detail that makes a bathroom feel like it was designed rather than just specified.
Editor’s Note: Frameless glass enclosures like this one make a narrow bathroom feel considerably wider because your eye travels straight through to the back wall. If you’re budgeting for a remodel, that single swap often delivers more visual impact than retiling the floor. Worth knowing: brushed brass hardware holds up better against water spots than polished chrome, so factor that in before you order.
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The exterior shot shows the modern farmhouse with stone, cedar siding, and wraparound porch. Below it, the floor plan lays out three bedrooms, an eat-in kitchen, family room, primary suite with wet room, and a two-car garage.
