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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,356
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan

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The main floor spans 2,356 square feet with three bedrooms, an office, and open-concept living. The great room connects to the kitchen and dining area at the rear. The primary suite sits privately on the left with a walk-in closet and full bath. A mud room, foyer, and front porch round out the layout.
Floor Plan

Positioned above the garage, this bonus room measures 14 feet 8 inches by 24 feet 6 inches with 8-foot ceilings. A staircase connects it to the main level below. At 377 square feet, the space offers room for a home office, media room, or guest suite. Dashed lines indicate areas with sloped or limited ceiling height.
Common Mistake: Homeowners often finish a bonus room without planning for a closet, then discover it can’t legally count as a bedroom during resale. Adding a closet during initial construction costs far less than retrofitting one later. Check local building codes before framing begins to avoid this oversight.
Warm Wood Tones and Gray Walls Set the Tone in This Foyer
Dark hardwood floors, gray walls, white trim, and a glass-panel front door anchor this foyer with natural light.
Pro Tip: Recessed lighting works well in foyers, but pairing it with a statement fixture closer to the entry door draws the eye forward and adds depth to a long hallway. Layering two light sources prevents the flat, washed-out look that comes from relying on ceiling cans alone.
Exposed Ceiling Beams and a Stone Fireplace Anchor This Living Room

Gray walls, white sofas, wood-plank floors, and open shelving frame a stone fireplace with an active fire.
Fun Fact: Faux wood beams made from polyurethane foam weigh a fraction of real timber and can be installed by one person without structural support. They hold paint and stain well, making them nearly indistinguishable from the real thing once mounted. Builders use them frequently in ranch homes where ceiling height is modest but visual warmth is still a priority.
Moving into the dining room, natural light and open views take center stage in a big way.
Candle-Style Chandelier and Countryside Views Define This Dining Room

Floating shelves display ceramics and framed art against soft gray walls. Black chairs surround a two-tone table anchored by a patterned rug. Wide windows frame rolling green fields outside.
Transition: Roman shades let you control light without blocking the view entirely. Pairing them with sheer panels gives you two layers of coverage, which matters most in a south or west-facing dining room where afternoon glare hits the table directly.
Black Pendants and a Wood Island Top Ground This Open-Concept Kitchen

Three matte black pendants hang over an island with a rich walnut-toned wood surface. White shaker cabinets line the perimeter with black hardware throughout. Counter stools in white contrast the black island base. Small potted herbs sit centered on the island. A stainless refrigerator anchors the right wall.
Small potted herbs sit centered on the island.
Bold Yellow Accents and Black-Framed Art Give This Home Office Its Edge

Yellow orb sculptures sit on a weathered wood desk against gray walls. Black floating shelves display books and framed photos above a herringbone area rug.
By The Numbers: Flat floating shelves mounted without visible brackets can hold up to 50 pounds each when anchored into studs. Spacing three shelves at uneven intervals, rather than equal gaps, creates a visual rhythm that feels intentional rather than rigid.
White Cane Bed Frame and Roman Shades Anchor This Carpet-Floored Bedroom

Soft, beige walls meet white trim throughout. Wall sconces flank a cane headboard. Navy pillow accents break up the gray bedding, and a large window frames open green fields beyond.
- Cane headboard panels allow airflow and add texture without added visual weight
- Matching white nightstands keep the palette consistent on both sides of the bed
- A low-profile desk along the far wall doubles as a media console without crowding the room
Marble Shower Wall and Freestanding Tub Bring Spa-Level Calm to This Bath

White marble tile lines the walk-in shower, black fixtures contrast against it, and a freestanding soaking tub sits below a Roman shade window overlooking open land.
The Psychology Behind This: Placing a soaking tub directly below a window creates a visual anchor that draws the eye through the room rather than stopping at the vanity. Research on restorative environments shows that even a view of green space, seen while at rest, lowers cortisol levels measurably. Buyers consistently rank a window-adjacent tub among the features they remember most after touring a primary bath.
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Exterior rendering shows a modern farmhouse facade above a 2,356-square-foot main floor plan with three bedrooms and open living.
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