
Early spring, coffee still hot, dog at your feet, and not a single carpool on the calendar — the Wrenfield was designed for exactly this version of a Saturday. A deep covered porch, an open layout that breathes without feeling hollow, a walk-in pantry stocked for grandkid weekends, and a kitchen that cleans up fast enough to get you back outside before the morning’s gone.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 1,856
- Bedrooms: 2-3
- Bathrooms: 2.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

Single-story layout with the master suite tucked left — soaking tub, walk-in closet, the works — two guest bedrooms across the top, and a proper open kitchen-dining-living core anchoring the middle. Mudroom, pantry, and laundry all cluster near the right entry, which is exactly where they should be.
Fluted Wood Fireplace Wall That Actually Earns the Attention It Gets

Vertical fluted wood cladding runs floor to ceiling around a linear gas fireplace — substantial enough to anchor the room without crowding out the cream sectional in front of it.
Style Tip: Floating shelves read best when they’re not stuffed. Two or three objects at staggered heights, some space between them — the cactus print and sculptural vase here are a good example of letting the wall do some of the talking.
Now the dining room pulls the open-plan concept into full focus.
Long Table Energy With Room Enough to Actually Seat Everyone
Warm oak runs from the floor straight up through the dining table and chairs, giving the whole corner a material consistency that feels considered rather than accidental. Dark plates against the natural wood pop without working too hard at it. The drum pendant is scaled just right — big enough to hold its own over a table that seats eight, not so big it swallows the room.
Fluted Island Base With a Faucet Placed Exactly Where You’d Never Expect

The brass faucet sits noticeably off-center, shifted toward the prep end of the island rather than planted dead-center over the sink. Practical decision. The fluted wood base reads more like a piece of furniture than a run of cabinetry, and the clear globe pendants overhead keep things light without competing with the walnut range hood behind them.
The Psychology Behind This: Kitchens with two distinct cabinet tones — cream uppers, wood lowers — tend to feel less clinical than all-white designs because the eye has somewhere to land and somewhere to move on to. That contrast also makes the space more forgiving; it doesn’t need to look showroom-perfect to read as intentional.
Botanical Prints and Natural Wood Make the Quiet Case for Restraint

Hardwood floors, a linen bench at the foot of the bed, three framed botanical prints above the headboard. That’s really all this room needs. The sage throw keeps the palette grounded without pushing it into statement territory, and the natural light handles everything the décor doesn’t.
Pro Tip: Art above a headboard reads better when it hangs lower than instinct suggests. Target eye level from a seated position on the bed, not eye level standing. Most people hang bedroom art too high and the whole wall ends up feeling top-heavy.
Green Zellige Arch With Gold Hardware That Doesn’t Ask Permission

Emerald zellige tiles fill a full arch behind a freestanding soaking tub, wall-mounted gold fixtures catching the light, pale wood flooring keeping everything from tipping into excess.
Color Story: Green and gold together can go wrong fast, but neutral walls and pale wood give them room to settle rather than compete. What saves this from reading as loud is texture — the deep, mottled surface of the zellige breaks up the color so it never sits flat or oversaturated. The contrast carries less weight here than the material itself.
Butcher Block Counter Over a Washer-Dryer Pair That Finally Pulls Its Weight

A butcher block counter sitting directly on front-load machines is one of those moves that’s obviously useful and somehow still rare in actual laundry rooms. The patterned tile backsplash stops the wood from skewing too rustic, and the hanging rod above handles what folding alone never quite solves.
The patterned tile backsplash keeps the wood from reading too rustic.
Murphy Bed Hidden in Plain Sight Behind Sage Paneled Doors

Sage paneled doors fold away to reveal a Murphy bed, and the gold desk legs pick up the brass lamp nearby — small material echo, room that works two ways without looking like it’s trying to.
Pin It

Exterior rendering showing board-and-batten siding alongside the floor plan — three bedrooms, open living areas, and a walk-in pantry all accounted for.
