
Wild Rose Lane brings the modern farmhouse aesthetic down to earth for households that want everything on one level without giving up room to grow. A three-car garage handles the practical side, and a bonus room keeps the floor plan flexible enough to evolve with whoever calls it home.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 4,011
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan

The main floor centers on an 18×24 great room with a vaulted ceiling, flanked by the master suite on the left and the kitchen-dining zone on the right. A covered deck extends off the dining area, while the den, entry, pantry, and powder room fill the middle. A two-car garage anchors the lower right.
Floor Plan

The second floor holds three bedrooms, a bath, laundry, and two walk-in closets off Bedroom #1. Bedroom #3 sits near the staircase. A generous 25×24 bonus room anchors the southern end, with storage tucked below it — practical square footage that most plans just leave as dead space.
Floor Plan
The basement shows a large unfinished space ready for future use, with a roughed-in bedroom, closet, and bath already planned. Crawl space occupies the left wing, and the garage sits below grade at right.
The Psychology Behind This: Pre-plumbing an unfinished basement for a future bath is quiet forward thinking. Families grow into homes, and having the infrastructure already roughed in removes the biggest barrier to finishing the space later — the difference between a project you’ll start someday and one you actually will.
Floor-to-Ceiling Stacked Stone Makes the Fireplace Impossible to Ignore

White stacked stone runs straight up to the vaulted ceiling, giving the linear gas fireplace far more presence than a standard surround would allow. Light wood floors and leather seating keep things grounded. That circular chandelier overhead earns its scale in a room this tall.
Open-Plan Living Where the Kitchen and Family Room Share the Same Light

Leather recliners face French doors while a circular chandelier anchors the vaulted great room. The whole space reads as one volume of light.
Wagon Wheel Chandelier Anchors a Dining Room Built Around the Fireplace

Stacked stone climbs the wall behind a linear fireplace, giving the open-plan space a clear focal point from the dining table. Upholstered chairs with nailhead trim pull up to a solid wood table, and French doors open onto a railed deck with a view of the yard beyond.
In The Details: Round chandeliers with candle-style bulbs work well over rectangular tables because they soften the geometry without competing with it. Hang it centered on the table rather than the room, and you go from a fixture that looks placed to one that looks planned.
Candle-Ring Chandelier Over a Dining Table Built to Seat the Whole Family

French doors flood the dining area with natural light, and bar seating at the dark island keeps the kitchen social without collapsing the two zones into one. Nailhead trim on the upholstered chairs gives the furniture some weight, and the wall-mounted hood is industrial enough in scale that it doesn’t disappear into the upper cabinetry.
Pendant Lights Over a Waterfall Island Built to Handle Breakfast and Company

Four velvet counter stools pull up to a quartz waterfall island beneath globe and cylindrical pendant lights hung at staggered heights.
Black-and-White Island Kitchen Where Scale Does Most of the Work

Globe-glass pendants hang at staggered heights above an oversized island with dark cabinetry and a white quartz top. Under-island lighting grazes the floor just enough to define the base, and built-in ovens stack beside a full column fridge. Behind it all, the open plan pulls you straight toward the dining room — the whole kitchen reads as a sequence, not just a room.
Black Piano Against White Walls Gives This Sitting Room Its Personality

A polished black upright piano against a bare wall does more decorating than most furniture collections could. A fringed throw draped over the bench keeps it from feeling like a showroom. Outside, the picture window frames a sunny suburban street with enough presence that curtains would only get in the way.
A fringed throw draped over the bench keeps it from feeling like a showroom.
Stair Lighting at the Riser Level Pulls Off Something Most Builders Skip

LED strip lighting tucked beneath each riser is practical after dark, but it also gives the oak treads a warmth that recessed ceiling fixtures alone never quite manage. Black metal balusters keep the whole thing from going too soft. Sharp contrast. Good bones.
Hexagonal Chandelier Keeps a Vaulted Master Bedroom Grounded at the Center

A barn-style sliding door opens to the marble bathroom, while sconces flank two clerestory windows above a wood-framed upholstered bed. The hexagonal chandelier is doing real work here — without it, that vaulted ceiling would just be empty height.
Marble Shower Enclosure With a Rain Head and a Bench Built Into the Wall

Frameless glass panels with matte black hardware enclose a shower tiled floor to ceiling in veined marble. The built-in bench earns its keep without claiming extra floor space.
Freestanding Soaking Tub Centered Against Full-Slab Marble Walls
Calacatta-style marble runs floor to wall without a grout break to interrupt it. The freestanding tub sits centered under a small black-framed window, and the matte black filler faucet mounted directly to the wall keeps the tub deck completely clear. Glass-enclosed shower on the left has its own rain head overhead.
- Wall-mounted tub fillers free up the tub deck entirely, leaving room for a towel or tray without crowding the fixture.
- Large-format tile reduces grout lines across the floor, which makes cleaning faster and keeps the surface reading as one continuous plane.
- A window positioned above the tub brings in natural light without sacrificing wall privacy, since it sits high and faces a roofline rather than a neighbor.
Walk-In Closet With a Dresser Island and Open Shelving That Actually Gets Used

White built-ins line both walls — open shelving on one side, hanging rods on the other. The dresser island earns its footprint by keeping folded items off the shelves where they’d never stay folded anyway. Natural light from the window means you can actually see what you’re grabbing without hunting for a switch.
Green Velvet Chair in the Corner Earns Its Place Against All That White

Tufted linen headboard, light wood floors, and a basket tray on the bed keep the palette grounded without going cold.
Designer’s Secret: Velvet seating in a bedroom works harder than most people expect. It absorbs sound, adds visual weight, and gives the eye somewhere to land without cluttering the floor plan. One chair in a saturated color can accomplish what an entire accent wall sometimes can’t.
Bedroom With a View of Open Fields and Rooftops Worth Waking Up To

Woven lamp bases and layered textured pillows keep the all-white palette from reading flat or cold.
Floating Wood Vanity With Marble Countertop and a Separate Toilet Room

Matte black fixtures and seeded glass pendants give this double-sink vanity real edge.
LG Top-Load Pair in a Laundry Room That Finally Has the Storage to Match

Light wood cabinetry runs floor to ceiling beside a utility sink with a matte black faucet. Functional without feeling like an afterthought — which, in a laundry room, is harder to pull off than it looks.
Vaulted Bonus Room With Hardwood Floors and a View of Open Fields

Sloped ceilings give this upper-level sitting room a shape most bonus rooms never get. Bleached oak floors run long and wide, making the space feel bigger than its footprint, and a round wood coffee table paired with a blue accent chair does a lot with very little furniture on the floor.
Vaulted Home Office Tucked Into the Roofline With a View Worth the Commute

A barrel-vaulted ceiling follows the roofline down to knee walls on both sides, which naturally defines where furniture can go — no guesswork about what fits. The black chair and white two-drawer desk do their jobs without fuss. Outside, a tall evergreen and neighboring rooftop remind you you’re above street level.
Covered Deck With a Wood-Plank Ceiling and Recessed Lights Built to Stay Outside

Recessed lighting in a tongue-and-groove cedar ceiling means evenings out here don’t end when the sun goes down. The woven sectional earns its spot.
Sunset-Lit Modern Farmhouse With Stone Accents and a Three-Car Garage Worth the Lot Size

Dark shingle roof against white board-and-batten siding is a combination that photographs well but also holds up in Pacific Northwest weather. Stone cladding flanks the entry and garage, grounding what could’ve been a flat facade, and warm light spills from every window at dusk. That mountain backdrop isn’t staging. It’s just Tuesday here.
Sunset-Facing Exterior With Board-and-Batten Siding and Dormers That Pull Their Weight

Stone retaining walls terraced into the grade give this lot structure without fighting the slope. Black trim on the dormers and garage doors ties the whole elevation together cleanly.
Covered Wrap Porch and Board-and-Batten Exterior Glowing at Dusk
Board-and-batten siding with black-trimmed windows catches the last of the sunset. That wraparound porch with iron railings looks built for actual use, not just curb appeal.
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The top half shows the exterior of a modern farmhouse at dusk, with white board-and-batten siding, stone accents at the entry, and a three-car garage. Below it, the main floor plan lays out a vaulted great room, master suite with walk-in closet, open kitchen with pantry, den, and covered deck.
