Single Story, 1 Bed, 1 Bath, 348 sq. ft. Mediterranean Bungalow Floor Plans: Aqua Shutter Garden Bungalow

Last updated on April 7, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

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Aqua Shutter Garden Bungalow Floor Plan

This design is a petite one-bedroom cottage with Mediterranean spirit and a compact single-level plan.

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Aqua Shutter Garden Bungalow Top View

The facade is crisp and charming. Smooth white stucco walls set the tone. Arched windows and an arched entry door soften the form. Mint-toned shutters and the matching front door add a playful accent. Brick trim above the windows adds warmth and texture. The roof is a low-pitched hip clad in clay barrel tiles, with exposed rafter tails for a classic Spanish-Mediterranean finish.

These floor plans are draft drawings. They are available for download as a printable PDF, handy for review, markup, and a bit of delightful plan-staring.

  • Total area: 348 sq ft
  • Bedrooms: 1
  • Bathrooms: 1
  • Floors: 1

Main Floor

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Main Floor
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Main Floor

Download Floor PDF

The main floor is compact and efficient, measuring roughly 21 feet by 20 feet on the plan. The layout places the living room on the right, the kitchen on the left, and the bedroom in the lower-left portion. The utility room and bathroom sit near the upper middle area. A main entry opens into the living room, and a secondary exterior door near the kitchen adds convenience. Tiny, yes. Lazy, no.

  • Living Room: approximately 114 sq ft. This is the largest room and the central gathering space.
  • Kitchen: approximately 84 sq ft. Located on the left side with a practical counter arrangement.
  • Bedroom: approximately 96 sq ft. Tucked into the lower-left area for a more private feel.
  • Bathroom: approximately 30 sq ft. A compact full bath positioned close to the main living zone.
  • Utility: approximately 24 sq ft. A small service room that brings useful support to the plan.

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Aqua Shutter Garden Bungalow Floor Plan
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Aqua Shutter Garden Bungalow Floor Plan

We have more facade options of this design:

Black Marble Siding

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house siding black marble

The facade now wears black marble, swapping any rustic cladding for a glossy, veined suit. White streaks carve across the gables and frame the arches, tightening lines and boosting drama.

It’s the same cozy bungalow, suddenly dressed for a gala.

Against this inky skin, the aqua door and shutters pop like mint on espresso, while the brick window arches read as warm jewelry.

The terra-cotta roof caps the shine with textured contrast, and the stubby eaves cast crisp shadows on those mirror-like walls. Even the lanterns and rounded entry step feel upgraded, turning the doorway into a tiny, showy portal.

White Marble Siding

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house siding white marble

The siding’s been upgraded to white marble, and the whole facade now shimmers like a tiny palazzo. Subtle gray veining runs across large, tidy panels, sharpening the cottage lines beneath the terracotta roof and exposed rafter tails.

Brick eyebrow arches and sills pop as warm accents set into a cool, polished canvas.

Against the marble, the aqua door and shutters go full spotlight—brighter, crisper, cheekier. Black lanterns cast neat shadows on the stone while the chunky threshold and planters keep it grounded.

Same petite proportions, but the vibe jumps from garden shed to garden showpiece with one gleaming cladding swap.

Limestone Block Siding

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house siding limestone blocks

Swapped in limestone block siding and the facade leveled up from smooth to stout. Cream-to-honey stones with thick mortar joints form an irregular, sun-catchy mosaic. The texture adds heft and age-on-arrival charm. Tiny footprint, medieval biceps.

That stone skin sharpens every opening: the arched door and window brows pop, brick accents now crisp against pale rock. Aqua shutters and the plank door read brighter, like sea glass on sand.

Wrought-iron lanterns and the terracotta roof feel extra Provençal under the new cladding. Small cottage, large stone swagger.

Yellow Stucco Siding

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house siding yellow stucco

The change is loud and sunny: the facade now wears yellow stucco, trading any former cladding for smooth, light-catching walls.

That warm coat turns the petite massing into one tidy block, sharpening the arched door and windows while casting crisp shadows under the exposed rafter tails. The aqua shutters and door pop like seaside candy against it, and the brick window surrounds read richer and more textured.

This color shift also syncs beautifully with the mottled terra-cotta roof, making the tiles feel toasted rather than tired. The lanterns flank the entry with extra glow, the stone step looks cooler by contrast, and the deep window recesses feel more sculpted.

Net effect: a tiny Mediterranean daydream, bottled sunshine included.

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