Last updated on · ⓘ How we make our floor plans

This is a compact modern cabin plan with a crisp single-level arrangement. It is a one-bedroom house that trades sprawl for efficiency and does it rather well.
The facade blends Nordic minimalism with a barn-like silhouette. A steep front gable gives the house a strong profile. Dark vertical wood siding wraps the exterior for a clean, moody finish. A slim horizontal window band cuts across the front and sharpens the composition. The recessed entry keeps the face tidy. The roof is a simple dark metal gable, plain and handsome, with no need for theatrics.
These floor plans are draft documents. They are available for download as a printable PDF, which makes reviewing, printing, and passing them around delightfully easy.
- Total area: about 625 sq ft
- Bedrooms: 1
- Bathrooms: 1
- Floors: 1
Main Floor

The main floor measures 25 feet by 25 feet, for about 625 square feet. The layout is square, efficient, and easy to follow. The living room fills most of the right side. The kitchen and storage sit to the left. The bedroom is tucked into the upper-left corner. The bathroom and utility room line the upper-right side. There are two exterior access points, which is a nice little bonus.
- Living Room: The largest space in the plan. It occupies most of the right half and connects directly to the lower exterior entry.
- Kitchen: Located in the lower-left corner. It uses an L-shaped counter layout with a center island.
- Pantry: Set beside the kitchen. Compact and practical.
- Bedroom: Placed in the upper-left corner. Private, square, and easy to furnish.
- Closet: Positioned near the bedroom. Small, but very much on duty.
- Entryway: Near the top center of the plan. It creates a clear transition into the house.
- Bathroom: In the upper-right corner. It appears to include a shower, toilet, and sink.
- Utility: Next to the bathroom. Suitable for laundry or mechanical use.
We have more facade options of this design:
Grey Color Siding

The facade switches to cool gray vertical siding, the firewood shed bows out, and the addition is deleted—no sidecar, no backpack, just the main act. The result is a cleaner, more intentional face that reads calm instead of cluttered.
The slim clerestory ribbon now pops, and the flush entry sits neatly under the eave—monochrome, tight, and a little bit ninja.
Forest Green Color Siding

Now clad in forest‑green vertical planks, the facade reads darker and tighter; the hue sharpens the steep gable and makes the thin eave lines punchier. That long clerestory ribbon runs cleaner across the front, and the recessed door stands out as a single, well-aimed cut.
Wide overhangs look crisper, the concrete plinth stays uninterrupted, and the vertical boards run unbroken from base to peak: lean, orderly, a little monastic, but with ninja swagger.
Bronze Color Siding

The siding shifts to a bronze tone, trading the previous finish for a sleek, burnished shell. Vertical boards intensify the steep gable, and the door surround reads crisper against the metallic warmth. The clerestory band now gleams like a slim visor.
Aerial View

You can see the house has a sharply pitched, almost tent-like roof with broad overhangs that make it look ready for both snowstorms and dramatic selfies. The exterior is clad in dark materials with clean, minimal lines, giving it a sleek modern-cabin vibe. You can also see a compact side volume tucked under the main roof (optional), hinting at a smart, space-saving layout for those precious 625 square feet.
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