
Parents who have shared one hall bathroom with three kids stop negotiating bedtime and start negotiating sink time — third grader brushing teeth while a sixth grader waits in the hall, someone crying, someone late. The Wrenfield ends that standoff with a Jack and Jill bath connecting the two kids’ rooms, a primary suite the kids have no business entering, and a single-story layout that keeps everything loud in one wing and quiet in another.
Specifications
- Sq. Ft.: 2,661
- Bedrooms: 4
- Bathrooms: 3.5
Floor Plan – Main Floor

Single-story layout with four bedrooms, vaulted living and kitchen, Jack and Jill bath, primary suite wing, office, and a rear covered porch spanning 44 feet.
Dark Wood Columns Frame an Outdoor Living Room That Actually Gets Used

An exposed beam ceiling, dark hardwood decking, and a chandelier overhead give this covered porch the feel of an indoor room that someone forgot to put walls around. Which is the point.
Rattan, Raw Wood, and a Fireplace Stacked With Logs Ready to Actually Burn
The woven ottoman pulls double duty as a coffee table, and the wood-frame chairs keep the white upholstery from feeling too precious. Everything in here looks like it gets sat on regularly, which is more than you can say for most living rooms photographed at this angle.
Now step inside, where the kitchen and living room share the same vaulted ceiling without a wall between them.
Vaulted Ceiling, Gold Chandelier, and a Kitchen Island With Room for Everyone

Brass pendants hang at staggered heights over an island that seats at least four, white upper cabinets pair with warm wood lowers, and blue subway tile pulls the eye straight to the range wall. Comfortable and unpretentious — the kind of kitchen people actually cook in rather than photograph once and leave.
Warm Wood, Black Steel Frames, and a Chandelier That Earns Its Place

French-inspired chairs with cream upholstery surround a plank-top dining table, while black steel window frames pull the eye outward without competing with the warm wood tones underfoot. The chandelier is the right size for the room — not trying to be the whole story.
Ask Yourself: Would you rather have this formal dining room, or would you trade it for a larger kitchen with a built-in breakfast nook? Think about how often you actually sit down for a proper meal before you commit to the square footage.
Covered Porch With a Gabled Roof Structure That Pulls You Outside Every Evening

Dark wood columns and exposed timber framing give this covered porch real architectural weight — not the decorative kind, the kind that makes the whole exterior look intentional. Outdoor seating arranged around a round table makes it functional. Large black-framed windows flanking the porch keep the interior rooms bright even after the sun drops behind the trees.
Quick Fix: Covered porches attached to the main roofline feel more permanent than freestanding pergolas because they share the same drainage and structural system. Getting this integrated during framing costs considerably less than retrofitting it after drywall goes up — one of those decisions that’s genuinely easier to make on paper than it is to regret later.
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Exterior rendering of a New American ranch paired with its four-bedroom single-level floor plan.
Pro Tip: Jack and Jill baths work best when each bedroom gets its own dedicated vanity rather than sharing one inside the connected bath. Kids fight over counter space far more than they fight over shower time, and routing a private vanity into each bedroom keeps mornings moving without the standoff.
