Modern Ranch House Floor Plans: Stone and Timber Fusion

Last updated on March 24, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

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Ranch Harmony: The Stone and Timber Fusion Floor Plan

This is a contemporary single-story house plan with a clean one-bedroom layout. The design is compact, open, and sensibly zoned. Public space stays central, private space stays separate, and the circulation avoids any corridor melodrama.

The facade is crisp and modern. Angled roof planes create a lively silhouette. Dark vertical board-and-batten siding is paired with natural stone at the chimney and base walls. Large black-framed windows sharpen the composition, while warm wood soffits and a modern wood entry door soften it. The roofing reads as low-slope standing-seam metal. No fussy trim. No roof circus. Just good geometry.

These floor plan drafts are prepared for review and planning. They are also available for download as a printable PDF, which makes sharing, markup, and measuring pleasantly straightforward.

  • Total area: 1,328 sq ft
  • Bedrooms: 1
  • Bathrooms: 1
  • Floors: 1

Main Floor

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Main Floor

Download Floor PDF

The main floor measures 48 feet by 33 feet and provides 1,328 square feet of space. The layout is split into three clear zones. The kitchen occupies the left side. The living room sits in the middle. The bedroom takes the right wing. Between them, the pantry and utility room do the quiet work that keeps a house civilized.

Room areas below are approximate, based on the draft plan. The arrangement is easy to understand and easy to live in. No maze. No nonsense.

  • Kitchen: A large work area with an island, long counter runs, and generous open floor space.
  • Bathroom: A full bath with tub, toilet, and double-sink vanity.
  • Pantry: Small, handy, and exactly where it should be.
  • Utility: A compact service room placed near the center of the plan.
  • Living Room: The central gathering space with direct access to the entry side.
  • Bedroom: Spacious for a one-bedroom plan and set apart for privacy.
  • Closet: Dedicated bedroom storage tucked neatly off the sleeping area.

View more designs like this

We have more facade options of this design:

White Siding and White Brick

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house siding white color and white brick

The facelift goes full-on white: vertical siding repainted to a bright, clean white and the masonry reworked as white brick. That unified tone streamlines the massing, so the staggered shed roofs, chimney-like brick tower, and layered entry volumes read crisper—like fresh snow outlining sharp folds.

With the facade now monochrome, the warm cedar soffits and chunky wood front door pop like exclamation points, and the dark fascia and window frames cut neat silhouettes. Glass feels larger, the porch reads lighter, and the whole modern front gets a sunny, gallery vibe—same shape, new sparkle.

Red Siding and Red Brick

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house siding red color and red brick

The new red siding and matching red brick reboot the facade, dialing up warmth and contrast. Vertical boards read as deep claret, while the brick chimney mass and low plinth echo it in sturdier texture.

Black window frames snap against the red field, and the big, asymmetrical shed roofs feel bolder. The glass looks brighter, like the house put on lipstick and meant business.

At the entry, the honey-toned door and soffits glow harder against the reds, pulling the recessed porch forward while keeping shadows dramatic. Brick now grounds the corners and chimney, stepping neatly along the base to frame plant beds and the walk.

The color shift sharpens the staggered shed roofs and clerestory band, turning them into crisp silhouettes. Same geometry, new attitude—forest chic with a smidge of spice.

Forest Green Siding

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house siding forest green color

The siding went forest green, and the facade snapped into sharper focus. The deep hue punches up the pale ledgestone chimney and base, makes the black window frames read bolder, and turns the cedar soffits and sculptural front door into warm, buttery highlights.

Vertical green boards stretch the walls and streamline the staggered shed roofs. Roof edges feel sleeker, glazing looks cleaner, and the entry now works like a lantern under those cantilevers—cabin meets gallery, with a wink.

Bronze Siding and Black Brick

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house siding bronze color and black brick

The facade now switches to bronze siding and black brick. Bronze sheets wrap the staggered volumes and window bays, syncing with the warm soffits under those sly shed roofs.

The brick base and chimney go jet-black, banding the entry and wings into one dark plinth. That pale wood door pops like a spotlighted VIP.

This new duo punches up the geometry: black brick grounds the steps and low walls, while bronze ricochets soft light around the tall panes and clerestories.

Trim reads crisper against the inky masonry, and the layered rooflines feel bolder—espresso body, caramel shimmer. Taller at the chimney, sleeker at the porch, and modern without breaking a sweat.

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