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Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,575
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan

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This single-story layout spans 72 feet wide and puts the primary suite in a private corner off the entry, away from three secondary bedrooms clustered on the opposite wing. The great room opens to both the dining area and the rear porch. A pantry, laundry room with lockers, and a bonus room access round out the practical core.
Floor Plan

Upper level centers on a bonus room with 9-foot ceilings, a full bath with 48×36 shower, and a closet. Stair access and attic entry keep the layout practical and self-contained.
Worth Knowing: The bonus room isn’t counted in the heated square footage, which matters for both permitting and resale comparisons. At 13-8 x 16-4, it’s large enough to work as a bedroom, home office, or media room without feeling like an afterthought. Sloped ceilings on two sides are typical for over-garage spaces, so furniture placement will take some planning.
Pendant Lights and Dark Counters Make This Island the Anchor of the Kitchen
Geometric lantern pendants hang low over the island, casting warm light onto what looks like a honed dark stone countertop. The white shaker cabinets run floor to ceiling, with frosted glass panels on the uppers. Built-in bookshelf ends on the island are a practical touch. Wood barstools with woven seats keep things grounded.
Three ways the island earns its footprint
- Open shelving on the end holds cookbooks within arm’s reach of the cooktop
- Seating for three doesn’t crowd the aisle behind it
- The faucet placement suggests a prep sink, keeping tasks off the perimeter counter
Leather and Green Velvet Pull This Living Room in Two Directions at Once

Brown leather sofa curves toward the fireplace wall, anchored by built-ins and a TV. Green chairs add warmth without competing.
Trend Alert: Curved sofas are making a genuine comeback in family rooms, and it’s easy to see why. Unlike a standard rectangular sectional, a curved silhouette naturally draws seating toward a focal point, like a fireplace, without requiring a strict symmetrical layout. Rooms with asymmetric furniture arrangements tend to feel lived-in rather than staged.
The dining room keeps that same relaxed character without leaning too hard on any single piece of furniture.
Rush Seats and a Teal Sideboard Keep the Dining Room Grounded

Ladder-back chairs with woven rush seats pair with a pine table, while the painted teal sideboard adds just enough contrast to prevent the room from reading too neutral.
Tray Ceiling and Sage Bedding Give This Primary Suite Its Quiet Authority

Recessed lighting in the tray ceiling warms the room without competing with the two windows flanking the bed. The quilted sage coverlet and Oriental rug do most of the work here. Dark wood nightstands keep it grounded.
Style Math: Tray ceilings add visual height without raising actual ceiling height, which means you get the architectural interest without the heating and cooling penalty of a full vaulted space. Paired with recessed lighting at the perimeter, they create a soft, indirect glow that overhead fixtures rarely achieve on their own.
Warm Sconces and Under-Cabinet Glow Make This Ensuite Feel Like Its Own Room

Arched mirror, marble countertop, and toe-kick lighting keep the vanity grounded after dark.
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Exterior photo shows a red-sided craftsman farmhouse with a covered front porch. The floor plan below details four bedrooms, a bonus room, a great room, and a two-car garage across a single story.
