
The covered patio tells you everything: slow coffee before nine, October light coming in low, the dog stretched out by the door. The Woosehill Lane is built around that kind of day — an open living area scaled for two, outdoor space treated as a proper room, and not a single square foot wasted on a kid’s bathroom you haven’t needed in years.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,783
- Bedrooms: 2
- Bathrooms: 2
Floor Plan

Single-story layout with two bedrooms, office, open living and dining, covered patio, and attached two-car garage.
Dark Roof, White Walls, and a Stone Base That Earns Its Keep

The slate-dark roof and granite base strip give this ranch real visual weight — the kind that reads as intentional from the curb, not just painted. Floor-to-ceiling sliding doors do the rest, pulling the boundary between inside and out until it barely exists.
Open-Plan Living Where the Kitchen Doesn’t Fight for Attention
Gray upholstered sofas with wood frames anchor the seating area without crowding it, and the kitchen island pulls bar stools close enough to make the whole space feel like one room rather than two zones tolerating each other. Pendant lights do real work overhead. Wood floors run the full length, and nothing feels leftover.
- Pendant lights over the island keep the kitchen visually connected to the living area
- Matching wood frames on both sofas tie the seating group together without matching sets
- The open layout lets empty nesters host without rearranging furniture every time
Oak Frames and Charcoal Cushions in a Room That Knows When to Stop

Wood-framed chairs with that much visual weight could easily crowd a room. They don’t.
The oak frames carry enough warmth to keep the charcoal upholstery from reading cold, which is a harder balance to land than it looks. Sliding doors pull the lawn into the sightline. And the bar stools at the kitchen island pick up the same wood tone without looking like anyone planned it that way — which is exactly the point.
Red Barstools and a Farmhouse Sink That Steal the Show

Four red leather barstools line a white island topped with dark honed stone, and the undermount farmhouse sink sits slightly off-center in a way that feels deliberate rather than accidental. Three industrial pendants cast warm pools of light overhead. Wooden-handled utensils, a bowl of lemons, a wine bottle — the counter reads lived-in without tipping into cluttered.
Budget Tip: Honed granite or leathered quartzite hides fingerprints and water spots far better than polished stone, which translates to less daily wiping and fewer regrets six months in. If budget is tight, ask your stone yard what remnant slabs are available before pricing anything new — a honed finish on a remnant can come in well under a full custom order.
Barn Door, Layered Neutrals, and a Framed Street Scene Above the Bed

Warm oak nightstands anchor each side of the upholstered bed, and a sliding barn door on black hardware pulls the eye left before it settles into the rest of the room. The framed photograph above the headboard is oversized — big enough to read as architecture rather than decor, which most art above beds fails to do. Matching dome sconces keep the lighting low and even, and the bedding does the rest without trying.
Ask Yourself: Before hanging art above a headboard, hold it at height and live with it for a day. Scale matters more than style here. A frame that stops too short floats awkwardly, while one that nearly grazes the ceiling grounds the whole wall.
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On top, a modern ranch exterior pairs white stucco with cedar gable cladding and a wall of steel-framed glass. Below, the floor plan reveals a 55′-8″ x 60′-4″ footprint with two bedrooms, an office, open living and dining, a laundry/mud room, and a covered patio running the full rear width.
Did You Know: Ranch homes with rear covered patios tend to hold their resale value well in warm climates because buyers treat usable outdoor space almost like interior square footage. If you’re sizing a patio, matching its depth to the interior ceiling height produces proportions that feel considered rather than tacked on as an afterthought.
